Within the past several years, the U.S. Department of Justice has pledged to prosecute asylum-seekers who enter the United States outside an official port of entry without inspection. This practice has contributed to mass incarceration and family separation at the U.S.–Mexico border, and it has prevented bona fide refugees from accessing relief in immigration court. Yet, federal judges have taken refugee prosecution in stride, assuming that refugees, like other foreign migrants, are subject to the full force of American criminal justice if they skirt domestic border controls. This assumption is gravely mistaken. This Article shows that Congress has not authorized courts to punish refugees for illegal entry or reentry. While largely taken fo...
The state of the law regarding refugees in the United States has been characterized in the recent pa...
The aggravated felony provision of the U.S. Immigration and Nationality Act was was originally inten...
The Double Jeopardy Clause of the United States Constitution provides: No person shall...be subject ...
Within the past several years, the U.S. Department of Justice has pledged to prosecute asylum-seeker...
Thousands of long-term legal permanent residents are deported from the United States each year becau...
In this Article, Professor Francis argues that non-citizen criminal defendants should be afforded gr...
Congress intended that the serious nonpolitical crime bar under United States asylum law have the sa...
Immigration policy is back on the American public\u27s radar screen. The fields of immigration--a ci...
Federal courts of appeals have declared that they may dismiss immigration appeals filed by noncitize...
This Article argues that we should take a deeper look at the applicability of federal common law def...
This Article traces the history of two federal immigration crimes that have long supplemented the ci...
A number of jurisdictions have fastened onto a solution that appears to reconcile respect for refu...
United States immigration courts that decide asylum cases are situated within the Justice Department...
Refugees are not protected from deportation if they have been convicted of a “particularly serious c...
The rise of immigration prosecution as the central feature of the federal criminal justice system ch...
The state of the law regarding refugees in the United States has been characterized in the recent pa...
The aggravated felony provision of the U.S. Immigration and Nationality Act was was originally inten...
The Double Jeopardy Clause of the United States Constitution provides: No person shall...be subject ...
Within the past several years, the U.S. Department of Justice has pledged to prosecute asylum-seeker...
Thousands of long-term legal permanent residents are deported from the United States each year becau...
In this Article, Professor Francis argues that non-citizen criminal defendants should be afforded gr...
Congress intended that the serious nonpolitical crime bar under United States asylum law have the sa...
Immigration policy is back on the American public\u27s radar screen. The fields of immigration--a ci...
Federal courts of appeals have declared that they may dismiss immigration appeals filed by noncitize...
This Article argues that we should take a deeper look at the applicability of federal common law def...
This Article traces the history of two federal immigration crimes that have long supplemented the ci...
A number of jurisdictions have fastened onto a solution that appears to reconcile respect for refu...
United States immigration courts that decide asylum cases are situated within the Justice Department...
Refugees are not protected from deportation if they have been convicted of a “particularly serious c...
The rise of immigration prosecution as the central feature of the federal criminal justice system ch...
The state of the law regarding refugees in the United States has been characterized in the recent pa...
The aggravated felony provision of the U.S. Immigration and Nationality Act was was originally inten...
The Double Jeopardy Clause of the United States Constitution provides: No person shall...be subject ...