Immigration Cases Are At An All-Time High

More than 585,000 immigration cases are waiting for a judge’s decision.It could take up to four years for all of the cases to be heard.

The number of immigration cases awaiting a decision in the U.S. is the highest it’s ever been, with 585,930 pending cases as of April 2017, according to a new report by the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, a non-partisan data center based out of Syracuse University.

The number of pending cases has been steadily increasing since the beginning of the Obama administration, when immigration arrests surged. At this time last year, there were just over 500,000 pending cases, compared to fewer than 200,000 cases a decade ago. Under Obama, whom some immigration activists dubbed the “deporter-in-chief,” more immigrants were deported than under any other president: by the end of his second term, nearly 3 million people. According to TRAC, there simply aren’t enough immigration judges to address the caseload, even though 79 new judges have been sworn in since November 2015.

Under Trump, immigration arrests have increased 32 percent compared to this time last year, and many of those arrested have either committed minor crimes, like traffic offenses, or have no criminal record. Because of the staggering backlog of immigration cases, many of those picked up by Immigration and Customs Enforcement this year won’t even see a judge until the end of Trump’s first term. According to the TRAC report, the average wait time for an immigration case to be heard is 670 days, and immigrants in cities with more congested courts sometimes wait upwards of four years before their first hearing is even scheduled. For the hundreds of thousands of immigrants who are detained, this backlog means indefinite incarceration: 441,000 immigrants are held in more than 200 jails and detention centers across the country, and private prison companies, who saw their stocks soar after Trump won the election, run 65 percent of all ICE detention centers.