Immigration Prosecutions for November 2006

Number Latest Month 2,690
Percent Change from previous month -1.2
Percent Change from 1 year ago -18.1
Percent Change from 5 years ago (Including Magistrate Court) 123.2
Percent Change from 5 years ago (Excluding Magistrate Court) 7.4

Table 1: Criminal Immigration Prosecutions

The latest available data from the Justice Department show that during November 2006 the government reported filing 2690 new immigration prosecutions.  According to the case-by-case information analyzed by the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC), this number is down 1.2% over the previous month.

The comparisons of the number of defendants charged with immigration -related offenses are based on case-by-case information obtained by TRAC under the Freedom of Information Act from the Executive Office for United States Attorneys. (See Table 1)

When monthly 2006 prosecutions are compared with those of the same period in the previous year, the filings were down (-18.1 percent). Prosecutions over the past year are still much higher than they were five years ago. Overall, the data show that the prosecutions are up 123.2 percent from levels reported in 2001.

The substantial growth in these cases is partly related to increases in the matters filed in U.S. Magistrate Courts. If magistrate cases are excluded and only Federal District Court cases are counted, the overall increase in immigration prosecutions is 7.4 percent instead of 123.2 percent. The evidence suggests that part of the difference may be the result of improvements in the recording of the magistrate cases by the Justice Department.

Plot of moveave * FYMONDT

Figure 1: Criminal Immigration Prosecutions over the last five years

The broad pattern of increase in immigration prosecutions over the past five years is shown more clearly in Figure 1. The vertical bars in Figure 1 represent the number of immigration prosecutions recorded on a month-to-month basis. The superimposed line on the bars plots the six-month moving average so that natural fluctuations are smoothed out. The one and five-year rates of change in Table 1 and in the sections that follow are all based upon this six-month moving average.

PIE3D chart of AGENGRP

Figure 2: Prosecutions by Investigative Agency

Virtually all federal criminal prosecutions for immigration offenses in November 2006 (95 percent) were referred by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).  The two lead investigative agencies in DHS are Customs and Border Protection (CBP) whose border patrol agencies guard the county's borders, and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), responsible for conducting most immigration criminal  investigations under the immigration laws. See Figure 2.

Lead Charge in Immigration Prosecutions

US Magistrate Courts

In November 2006, 75 percent of immigration cases took place in U.S. Magistrate Courts which handle less serious misdemeanor cases, including what are called "petty offenses." In the magistrate courts in November the most frequently cited lead charge was Title 8 U.S.C Section 1326 involving the "Reentry of deported alien". This was the lead charge for 43.5 percent of all magistrate filings in November.

Other frequently prosecuted lead charges include: "08 USC 1325 - Entry of alien at improper time or place, etc." (40.8%), "08 USC 1324 - Bringing in and harboring certain aliens" (8.4%).

US District Courts

Table 2 shows the top lead charges recorded in the prosecution of immigration matters filed in U.S. District court during November 2006. 

Lead Charge Count Rank 1yr ago 5yrs ago
08 USC 1326 - Reentry of deported alien 351 1 1 1
08 USC 1324 - Bringing in and harboring certain aliens 195 2 2 2
18 USC 1546 - Fraud and misuse of visas, permits, and 58 3 4 4
08 USC 1325 - Entry of alien at improper time or place, etc. 20 4 3 3
18 USC 1028 - Fraud and related activity - id documents 10 5 8 6
18 USC 1542 - False statement in application and use of passport 8 6 9 8
21 USC 0841 - Drug Abuse Prevention + Control-Prohibited acts A 6 7 12 9
08 USC 1253 - Alien hindering his/her removal from the US 5 8 20 18
18 USC 0911 - False personification - Citizen of the US 4 9 5 5
18 USC 1543 - Forgery or false use of passport 4 9 6 10

Table 2: Top 10 charges filed

  • "Reentry of deported alien" (8 U.S.C Section 1326 ) was the most frequent recorded lead charge. This statute was also ranked 1st a year ago as well as five years ago.

  • Ranked 2nd in frequency was the lead charge "Bringing in and harboring certain aliens" under Title 8 U.S.C Section 1324 . This statute was also ranked 2nd a year ago as well as five years ago.

  • Ranked 3rd was "Fraud and misuse of visas, permits, and other documents" under Title 18 U.S.C Section 1546. This statute was ranked 4th a year ago, while it was the 4th most frequently invoked 5 years ago.

PIE3D chart of mylabel

Figure 3: District Court vs.
Magistrate Court

Among these top ten lead charges, the one showing the greatest increase in prosecutions—up 133.3 percent—compared to one year ago was 8 U.S.C Section 1253 that involves "Alien hindering his/her removal from the US ". This was the same statute that had the largest increase—133.3 %—when compared with five years ago.

Again among the top ten lead charges, the one showing the sharpest decline in prosecutions compared to one year ago—down 63.5 percent—was Entry of alien at improper time or place; etc. (8 U.S.C Section 1325 ). This was the same statute that had the largest decrease— 60.8 %—when compared with five years ago.

Immigration Prosecutions by Judicial District

Understandably, there is great variation in number of immigration prosecutions that are filed in each of the nation's ninety-four federal judicial districts. The ten districts registering the largest number of prosecutions last month are shown in Table 3.

Judicial District Count Rank 1yr ago 5yrs ago
Texas, S 129 1 1 1
Arizona 69 2 3 2
Cal, S 67 3 5 3
Texas, W 64 4 2 4
Fla, S 37 5 7 9
N Mexico 29 6 4 5
Utah 20 7 11 13
Colorado 16 8 14 27
Cal, E 14 9 10 7
Kansas 14 9 25 28
Wash, E 14 9 16 17

Table 3: Top 10 districts

  • Southern District of Texas (Houston)—with 129 prosecutions—was the most active during November 2006. This district was also ranked 1st a year ago as well as five years ago.

  • Arizona ranked 2nd . This marked a rise from Arizona 's 3rdplace ranking just one year ago. Five years ago, the district's position was 2.

  • Southern District of California (San Diego) is now ranking 3rd . It moved up in its rankings from a year ago when it ranked 5th. Five years ago, the district's position was 3.

Recent entrants to the top 10 list were Utah , now ranked 7th , and Colorado at 8th. In the same order, these districts ranked 11th and 14th one year ago and 13th and 27th five years ago.

The federal judicial district which showed the greatest growth in immigration prosecutions compared to one year ago— 132.6 percent—was Kansas . This was the same district that had the largest increase— 311.5 %—when compared with five years ago.

In the last year, the judicial district court recording the largest drop in immigration prosecutions— 57.1 percent—was New Mexico .  But over the past five years, Eastern District of California (Sacramento) showed the largest drop— 43.6 percent.

Top Ranked District Judges

At any one time, there are about 680 federal district court judges working in the United States. For the entire nation, the judges recorded with the largest number of new immigration crime cases during November 2006 are shown in Table 4.

Judge Count Rank 1yr ago 5yrs ago
Brack, Robert C. N Mexico 26 1 3 -
Tagle, Hilda G. Texas, S 19 2 4 7
Crane, Randy Texas, S 18 3 5 -
Hanen, Andrew S. Texas, S 17 4 5 -
Alvarez, Micaela Texas, S 16 5 1 -
Hinojosa, Ricardo H. Texas, S 15 6 7 9
Moskowitz, Barry Ted Cal, S 11 7 26 25
Jack, Janis Graham Texas, S 11 7 14 61
Kazen, George P. Texas, S 10 9 2 5
Sabraw, Dana Makoto Cal, S 8 10 29 -
Briones, David Texas, W 8 10 9 1
Montalvo, Frank Texas, W 8 10 11 295

Table 4: Top 10 judges

All 12 of the "top ten" judges were in districts which were in the top ten with the largest number of immigration filings . (Because of ties, there were a total of 12 judges in the "top ten" rankings.)

  • Judge Robert C. Brack in the New Mexico ranked 1st with 26 defendants in new immigration cases. Judge Brack also appeared in the top ten rankings one year ago (ranked 3rd).

  • Judge Hilda G. Tagle in the Southern District of Texas (Houston) ranked 2nd with 19 defendants in new immigration cases. Judge Tagle also appeared in the top ten rankings one year (ranked 4th) and five years ago (rank 7th).

  • Judge Randy Crane in Southern District of Texas (Houston) ranked 3rd with 18 new immigration cases.  Judge Crane also appeared in the top ten rankings one year ago (ranked 5th).

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Copyright 2006, TRAC Reports, Inc.

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