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Border Patrol agents detain undocumented immigrants apprehended near the Mexican border on May 28 near McAllen, Texas. During the 2009 fiscal year 540,865 undocumented immigrants were apprehended entering the United States along the Mexican border.
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Federal Prosecutions of Immigrants
Soar
FRESNO,
California
(By Garance Burke, MSNBC)
July 16, 2010
Federal
prosecutions
of
immigrants
soared to
new levels
this spring,
as the Obama
administration
continued an
aggressive
enforcement
strategy
championed
under
President
George W.
Bush,
according to
a new study
released
Thursday.
The 4,145
cases
referred to
federal
prosecutors
in March and
April was
the largest
number for
any
two-month
stretch
since the
Immigration
and Customs
Enforcement
agency was
created five
years ago,
the Syracuse
University-based
Transactional
Records
Access
Clearinghouse
found.
They ranged
from
misdemeanor
illegal
entry to
prosecutions
of
immigrants
with
criminal
records.
The
government's
heavy focus
on
immigration
investigations
already is
creating a
heavy burden
for the
swamped
courts along
the
U.S.-Mexico
border,
whose judges
handle
hundreds
more cases
than most of
their
counterparts
in the rest
of the
country.
Federal
authorities
claim that
workload
would grow
if Arizona's
controversial
new
immigration
law were
implemented.
The new law
requires
police,
while
enforcing
other laws,
to check the
immigration
status of
anyone they
have a
reasonable
suspicion is
in the
country
illegally.
It will take
effect July
29 unless
blocked by a
court.
"People
already are
working 10-
or 12-hour
days and on
weekends to
just meet
the
caseload,"
said Matt
Dykeman, a
clerk in the
U.S.
District of
New Mexico
in
Albuquerque,
where the
percentage
of cases
referred by
Customs and
Border
Patrol
increased by
54 percent
from
February to
April this
year. "It's
not an
eight-hour
day, because
you have to
process them
and get them
in court for
that
detention
hearing."
Some of the
increase may
be due to
seasonal
upticks in
the flow of
migrants,
who often
tend to
cross the
border in
time for the
summer
harvest or
other
temporary
work,
Dykeman
said.
Hundreds of
acres of
fruit and
vegetable
crops are
ripening in
California's
Central
Valley, for
instance,
where farm
laborers
flock in the
warm months
seeking jobs
picking and
harvesting.
The
Department
of Homeland
Security,
which
oversees
both
investigative
agencies,
did not
immediately
respond to a
request for
comment on
TRAC's
findings.
The
nonprofit
academic
research
group
obtained the
latest
figures from
the
Department
of Justice
under the
Freedom of
Information
Act. That
agency also
declined to
comment on
the
findings.
U.S.
Attorneys
along the
southwest
border, from
Texas to
California,
handle the
bulk of
cases
referred by
the border
patrol.
Department
of Homeland
Security
figures show
the number
of illegal
immigrants
in the
country has
fallen in
recent
years. As of
January
2009, an
estimated
10.8 million
people were
in the
country
illegally, 1
million less
than the
2007 peak,
according to
DHS.
At the same
time,
deportations
have been
increasing,
climbing
from 185,944
in 2007 to
387,790 last
year.
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