gszes, on 2018-June-14, 17:33, said:
I admit to laziness since I did not look up to see if the "judge" OR the appeals committee were part of the executive or the judicial branch.
Last Week Tonight did one of their main stories on Immigration Courts. They're part of the executive branch, and totally overwhelmed. Since they're not real courts, defendants aren't entitled to attorneys if they can't afford them (and probably most can't). Children routinely have to go into court by themselves -- they played a transcript of a little girl being questioned by the immigration judge. There's an enormous backlog (people generally wait years to get to court), and earlier this year Sessions instituted a quota for clearing cases, so they expedite rulings.
On NPR this morning they were interviewing someone about the current Zero Tolerance policy on illegal immigrants, which is separating children from their parents. They suggested that the Trump administration may be taking a hard line on this as a strategy to spur Congress to pass more common sense legislation. One of the current House bills does add wording that prohibits splitting up families like this, but it doesn't seem like any bill is likely to get to a vote any time soon. So the branches are playing chicken with the lives of immigrants at stake.