Bond hearings: What immigration courts should consider
The primary factors immigration judges should consider in bond proceedings are similar to those in the criminal justice system. The law instructs detained immigrants to show the court he or she does not pose a public safety risk and is not a flight risk warranting confinement.
Bond hearings: What immigration courts should consider is part of the Southern Poverty Law Center鈥檚 No End in Sight report. Read the full report.
Immigration courts, like criminal courts, look to family ties and community involvement through work or civic or religious activities to gauge flight risk. If a person does not pose a safety risk but poses a flight risk, courts should impose conditions to ensure the person appears in court for removal proceedings.
Frequently, money bail is imposed to ensure an appearance, but courts may impose other conditions, such as requiring the person to surrender travel documents to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
Santiago鈥檚 experience, which is documented in this report, highlights a troubling disparity among courts in bond grant rates and bond amounts. In the first eight months of fiscal year 2018, of detained immigrants nationwide got an immigration judge to grant them release on bond, at a median bond amount of $7,500. In Atlanta, while bond grant rates were , the median bond amount was far higher at $12,000, a sum many cannot afford to pay.
鈥楶unishing a person for his poverty鈥
When immigration courts grant a bond, they often fail to consider the person鈥檚 ability to pay, setting an amount a noncitizen cannot afford despite the Eighth Amendment forbidding excessive bail.1
In FY 2015, the average initial bond at Stewart Detention Center was $13,714.聽At Irwin County Detention Center, another facility in Georgia, the amount was $11,637. These amounts are far higher than the national average initial bond amount of $8,200. They also fail to show that an immigration judge can grant bonds as low as $1,500.
These bond amounts, unaffordable for many, help explain why in immigration proceedings remain detained at the close of the case.
Compounding the hardship for people is the fact that immigration officials require posting of the full cash amount of the bond rather than a percentage accompanied by collateral, which would occur in a criminal case. These practices undermine the very purpose of bail, which is to ensure a court appearance when a person isn鈥檛 a risk warranting confinement.
A line of cases involving detention in criminal matters has well established the principle that a poor person cannot be detained 鈥渇or inability to post money bail鈥 if there are alternatives to detention that can reasonably assure a court appearance.2
In 2017, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals considered whether the due process clause of the Constitution requires immigration officials to consider immigrants鈥 ability to pay bond and alternatives to detention in deciding what conditions are reasonably necessary to ensure they appear in court.3
The case, Hernandez v. Sessions, involved a class of noncitizen plaintiffs granted bond but unable to afford the high amounts. The court held that plaintiffs were likely to win on their claim that due process requires consideration of ability to pay. It also stated that by 鈥渕aintaining a process for establishing the amount of a bond that likewise fails to consider the individual鈥檚 financial ability to obtain a bond in the amount assessed or to consider alternative conditions of release, the government risks detention that accomplishes 鈥榣ittle more than punishing a person for his poverty.鈥欌4
Orders of recognizance and supervision
Another avenue for immigration courts is release on orders of recognizance or supervision, which allows a person to be released without paying bond. They were widely used in FY 2015, with release on orders of recognizance or supervision accounting for of those released from ICE custody.
That avenue was practically foreclosed to people detained at Stewart 鈥 such as the Sime贸n brothers, whose experience is included in this report 鈥 and detainees at the LaSalle ICE Processing Center in Louisiana and the Irwin County Detention Center in Georgia. The respective rates of release on such orders at the facilities were , and respectively.
Mandatory detention
In immigration courts, many migrants are denied the right to a bail hearing before a judge. The Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) subjects certain noncitizens to mandatory detention throughout their removal proceedings, again reflecting punitive measures for migrants who have been criminalized.5 This includes people removable due to a sweeping range of criminal offenses 鈥 including nonviolent offenses, such as drug offenses 鈥 despite the person having already served his or her sentence.6 ICE confined more than 12,000 such people in 2016.7
Similarly, asylum seekers at ports of entry who pass credible fear screenings 鈥 but are still detained by ICE 鈥 do not have the right to seek bail before a judge.8 In fiscal year 2015, an estimated 7,500 such asylum seekers were detained by ICE.9
The U.S. Supreme Court recently reviewed the blanket denial of bail hearings to these populations during removal proceedings and held the statute allowed it, regardless of the length of the confinement.10 It declined, however, to hear whether these parts of the INA violated the U.S. Constitution.11
1听U.S. Const. amend. VIII. Back to report.
2 See Pugh v. Rainwater, 572 F.2d 1053, 1058 (5th Cir. 1978) (en banc); Bearden v. Georgia, 461 U.S. 660, 671 (1983).聽Back to report.
3 Hernandez v. Sessions, 872 F.3d 976 (9th Cir. 2017).聽Back to report.
4 Id. at 992 (quoting Bearden, 461 U.S. at 671).聽Back to report.
5 8 U.S.C. 搂 1226(c).聽Back to report.
6 See Jennings v. Rodriguez, 138 S. Ct. 830, 860 (2018) (Breyer, J., dissenting).聽Back to report.
7 Brief of 43 Social Science Researchers and Professors as Amici Curiae Supporting Respondents at 6, Jennings v. Rodriguez, 138 S. Ct. 830 (2018).聽Back to report.
8 8 C.F.R. 搂 1003.19(h)(2)(i)(B) (鈥渁n immigration judge may not redetermine the conditions of custody imposed by [ICE] with respect to鈥a]rriving aliens in removal proceedings, including aliens paroled after arrival pursuant to section 212(d)(5) of the Act鈥).聽Back to report.
9 Brief of 43 Social Science Researchers and Professors as Amici Curiae Supporting Respondents at 8, Jennings v. Rodriguez, 138 S. Ct. 830 (2018).聽Back to report.
10 Jennings, 138 S. Ct. at 845, 847.聽Back to report.
11 Id. at 851.聽Back to report.