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Judge Vikram Badrinath
FY 2019 - 2024, Sacramento Immigration Court

Published Nov 7, 2024

Vikram K. Badrinath was appointed as an Immigration Judge to begin hearing cases in October 2022. Judge Badrinath earned a Bachelor of Arts in 1992 from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, and a Juris Doctor in 1995 from the University of Arizona James E. Rogers College of Law. Since 2001, Judge Badrinath has been a certified specialist in Immigration and Nationality Law from the State Bar of California, Board of Legal Specialization. From 1998 to 2022, he was a senior immigration attorney in private practice in Tucson, Arizona, representing individuals before the immigration court, Board of Immigration Appeals, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, U.S. District Courts, and Federal Circuit Courts of Appeal. From 1997 to 1998, he served as a managing attorney with a Phoenix-based immigration law firm in Tucson. From 1996 to 1997, he was an associate immigration attorney in private practice in Tucson Judge Badrinath is a member of the State Bar of Arizona, the State Bar of California, the District of Columbia Bar, the Hawaii State Bar, and is admitted to practice before the Supreme Court of the United States.

Deciding Asylum Cases

Detailed data on decisions by Judge Badrinath were examined for the period covering fiscal years 2019 through 2024. During this period, court records show that Judge Badrinath decided 386 asylum claims on their merits. Of these, he granted asylum for 314, granted 0 other types of relief, and denied relief to 72. Converted to percentage terms, Badrinath denied 18.7 percent and granted 81.3 percent of asylum cases (including forms of relief other than asylum).

Figure 1 provides a comparison of Judge Badrinath's denial rate each fiscal year over this recent period. (Rates for years with less than 25 decisions are not shown.)

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Figure 1: Percent of Asylum Matters Denied

Nationwide Comparisons

Compared to Judge Badrinath's denial rate of 18.7 percent, Immigration Court judges across the country denied 57.7 percent of asylum claims during this same period. Judges at the Sacramento Immigration Court where Judge Badrinath decided these cases denied asylum 27.5 percent of the time. See Figure 2.

Judge Badrinath's asylum grant and denial rates are compared with other judges serving on the same court in this table. Note that when an Immigration Judge serves on more than one court during the same period, separate Immigration Judge reports are created for any Court in which the judge rendered at least 100 asylum decisions.

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Figure 2: Comparing Denial Rates (percents)

Why Do Denial Rates Vary Among Judges?

Although denial rates are shaped by each Judge's judicial philosophy, denial rates are also shaped by other factors, such as the types of cases on the Judge's docket, the detained status of immigrant respondents, current immigration policies, and other factors beyond an individual Judge's control. For example, TRAC has previously found that legal representation and the nationality of the asylum seeker are just two factors that appear to impact asylum decision outcomes.

The composition of cases may differ significantly between Immigration Courts in the country. Within a single Court when cases are randomly assigned to judges sitting on that Court, each Judge should have roughly a similar composition of cases given a sufficient number of asylum cases. Then variations in asylum decisions among Judges on the same Immigration Court would appear to reflect, at least in part, the judicial philosophy that the Judge brings to the bench. However, if judges within a Court are assigned to specialized dockets or hearing locations, then case compositions are likely to continue to differ and can contribute to differences in asylum denial rates.

Representation

When asylum seekers are not represented by an attorney, almost all of them (77%) are denied asylum. In contrast, a significantly higher proportion of represented asylum seekers are successful. In the case of Judge Badrinath, 19.7% were not represented by an attorney. See Figure 3. For the nation as a whole, about 16.4% of asylum seekers are not represented.

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Figure 3: Asylum Seeker Had Representation

Nationality

Asylum seekers are a diverse group. Over one hundred different nationalities had at least one hundred individuals claiming asylum decided during this period. As might be expected, immigration courts located in different parts of the country tend to have proportionately larger shares from some countries than from others. And, given the required legal grounds for a successful asylum claim, asylum seekers from some nations tend to be more successful than others.

The largest group of asylum seekers appearing before Judge Badrinath came from Russia. Individuals from this country made up 56.7% of his caseload. Other nationalities in descending order of frequency appearing before Judge Badrinath were: India (11.7%), Mexico (8.0%), Ukraine (5.4%), Afghanistan (3.9%). See Figure 4.

In the nation as a whole during this same period, major nationalities of asylum seekers, in descending order of frequency, were El Salvador (14.0%), Guatemala (13.2%), Honduras (12.4%), Mexico (8.2%), China (6.1%), India (5.4%), Venezuela (4.0%), Ecuador (3.7%), Nicaragua (3.5%), Colombia (2.9%), Cuba (2.6%), Brazil (2.6%), Russia (2.4%).

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Figure 4: Asylum Decisions by Nationality
TRAC is a nonpartisan, nonprofit data research center affiliated with the Newhouse School of Public Communications and the Whitman School of Management, both at Syracuse University. For more information, to subscribe, or to donate, contact trac@syr.edu or call 315-443-3563.