US Appeal Courts flooded by asylum seekers
Publish date: 10 May 2005
Issue Number: 1331
Diary: Legalbrief Today
Category: Immigration
Federal Appeal Courts in the US are being swamped with cases by asylum seekers.
The Los Angeles Times reports although the trend is nationwide, it is particularly bad in the San Francisco-based US 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. In the year ending June 30, 2001, the immigration caseload was 965. It skyrocketed to 4 835 cases in the year ending in June 2004. Three years ago, immigration cases were 8% of our calendar, said 9th Circuit Judge Michael Daly Hawkins. Today it is 48%. Much of the blame for the problem has been laid on the Board of Immigration Appeals, a quasi-judicial body appointed by the US Attorney-General, which has been criticised as being inefficient. Full report in the Los Angeles Times