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New York Times
July 30, 2011

Analysis Reveals Asylum Records of Judges
By Julian Aguilar


A new analysis of the decisions of United States immigration court judges finds that at least two of the five immigration judges in El Paso, where Mr. Gutiérrez’s case is being considered, have a far higher denial rate than the national average. The report, by the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, a nonpartisan center based at Syracuse University that tracks the enforcement activities of the federal government, analyzed the decisions of 265 immigration judges across the country who have ruled in at least 100 political asylum cases in the last five years. On average, over that period, immigration judges rejected 53.2 percent of asylum applications. But William L. Abbott and Thomas C. Roepke, both judges in El Paso, had a combined rejection rate of 83.3 percent in 346 cases — most from Mexico and Central America — decided between 2006 and July 2011. Mr. Roepke denied asylum requests in 96.7 percent of his cases — the third-highest rejection rate among the judges included in the Syracuse report. The denial rate for Mr. Gutiérrez’s judge, Robert Hough, was not determined because he had decided fewer than 100 cases. Earlier this year, Mr. Gutiérrez’s case was postponed until May 2012. The long delay is indicative of another problem highlighted in the Syracuse study: the system is overwhelmed, resulting in a significant backlog of cases.


Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, Syracuse University
Copyright 2011
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