President Donald Trump Takes The Gloves OFF – Democrat Judges FIRED,…

Trump Admin Dismisses Another Immigration Judge in San Fransciso

The Justice Department this week dismissed a sixth San Francisco immigration judge since President Donald Trump took office, continuing what appears to be a pattern of removing adjudicators with backgrounds in immigrant defense or higher asylum approval rates.

Judge Shira Levine, appointed to the court in October 2021, was terminated without explanation, NBC Bay Area reported.

Milli Atkinson, who heads the Immigrant Legal Defense Program at the Bar Association of San Francisco, said Levine received no reason for her removal, though the decision did not come as a complete surprise.

Since April, five other San Francisco immigration judges have been dismissed, including Judges Chloe Dillon and Elisa Brasil, who held two of the court’s highest asylum grant rates, according to Syracuse University’s Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse.

Dillon told KQED she learned of her firing through a three-sentence email on Aug. 22. She said she discovered it after returning to her office from a years-long asylum hearing, where she had already indicated her ruling and hoped to issue a decision that day, KQED noted further.

Dillon said she spent 90 minutes gathering her belongings, returning federal property, and handing off her 6,000-case docket without knowing who would take it over.

Her dismissal, she added, was not entirely a surprise. Under Trump, federal employees have been treated as at-will, and immigration courts have seen mass firings — particularly of judges appointed during the Biden administration, those with backgrounds in immigrant advocacy, or those with high asylum approval rates.

“They are specifically targeting one end of the spectrum because they don’t like those results; they don’t think that people should be granted asylum essentially,” she told the local outlet.

Five of the six judges dismissed had asylum approval rates above the national average and previously spent part of their careers representing immigrants in court, said KQED.

“It appears to be completely ideologically based,” former San Francisco immigration judge Dana Leigh Marks told the outlet regarding the firings.

“It’s making assumptions about people from their background, and it appears to be very results-oriented, targeted towards individuals who think more independently and are willing to listen to both sides when a case is presented to them rather than just accepting the government assertions,” she added.

A cornerstone of President Donald Trump’s 2024 campaign was mass deportation, a platform that helped propel him to an electoral washout of former Vice President Kamala Harris as well as a national majority.

Between fiscal years 2019 and 2024, Levine approved asylum in more than 97% of her cases, while Dillon granted 96.5%. By comparison, the national average during that period was about 50%, dipping below 36% last October, according to TRAC data.

Experts noted the high approval rates partly reflect that San Francisco asylum seekers are more likely to have legal representation and face different standards than in other states. Still, they said the Justice Department appears to be targeting judges viewed as less likely to align with prosecutors’ positions.

According to Marks, judges with backgrounds in immigrant advocacy, private practice, or public interest law are being dismissed, while those who advanced as prosecutors within the Department of Homeland Security’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement division have largely kept their posts.

Before her May 2023 appointment, Brasil practiced immigration law in the private sector, often handling pro bono cases. Levine spent more than five years with Centro Legal de la Raza and the Immigration Institute of the Bay Area.

Dillon previously served as an attorney advisor at Los Angeles’ immigration court, while another dismissed judge, Jami Vigil, worked eight years as court-appointed counsel for immigrant families.

In August, the Justice Department dropped the requirement that temporary immigration judges have prior experience in immigration law. A week later, the federal government authorized 600 military lawyers to serve in those roles.

Related Posts

Vice President JD Vance Rushed to Senate — All Hell Breaks Loose Over T…

Vance Casts Tie-Breaking Vote To Defeat Senate ‘War Powers’ Push Against Trump The Senate on Tuesday voted to block a resolution that would have required President Donald…

BIG NEWS – Court Delivers Emergency Ruling on ICE Operations in Minnesota

Judge Refuses To Halt ICE Ops in Minnesota Amid Legal Challenge A federal judge on Wednesday declined to immediately block the Biden administration’s intensified immigration enforcement operations…

THIS ESCALATED FAST! — Trump Races to NYC as Zohran Mamdani’s Order Cr…

Mamdani Faces Backlash After City Bus Fares Increase The new mayor of New York City is facing a wave of criticism after fares for city buses increased…

11 House Dems Give Trump 226-197 Victory — Americans Can Breathe a Sigh of Relief

House Votes 226-197 to Overturn Biden-Era Shower Rules The House of Representatives voted 226–197 on Tuesday to repeal Biden-era restrictions on household showerheads, marking a bipartisan victory…

Supreme Court Blockbuster Ruling on Mail-In Ballots — Massive Update for…

SCOTUS Rules Congressman Has Standing To Challenge Mail-In Voting Rules The U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday revived a Republican lawmaker’s challenge to an Illinois absentee ballot law,…

The Backstabbing Begins – Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey Shoves Tim Walz U…

Frey Admits ‘Everybody Could Have Done More To Prevent Fraud’ Jacob Frey acknowledged that fraud involving taxpayer-funded programs in Minnesota is “very real” during a nationally televised…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *