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52 Case W. Res. J. Int'l L. 599 (2020)
Abuse of Power: Immigration Courts and the Attorney General's Referral Power

handle is hein.journals/cwrint52 and id is 609 raw text is: 


CASE  WESTERN   RESERVE JOURNAL  OF INTERNATIONAL LAW  52 (2020)



     ABUSE OF POWER: IMMIGRATION

        COURTS AND THE ATTORNEY

        GENERAL'S REFERRAL POWER


                          Julie Menke'

                          ABSTRACT

    In June 2018, then Attorney General Jeff Sessions issued Matter
of A-B-. This  decision vacated the holding of the 2014 Board  of
Immigration Appeals decision, Matter of A-R-C-G-. In A-R-C-G-, the
adjudicator held that, depending on the specific facts of the case,
married  women   in  Guatemala  who  are  unable to  leave their
relationship constitutes a particular social group. Membership in a
particular social group is one of five ways to qualify for asylum in the
United  States. Membership  is based on  a  fact specific analysis
conducted by an immigration adjudicator. Sessions's decision to vacate
Matter of A-R-C-G- had a devastating impact on the viability of asylum
claims for individuals fleeing domestic violence.
    Matter of A-B- is just one of many instances where the Attorney
General has overruled the prior holding of the Board of Immigration
Appeals. Immigration  courts are housed under  the Department  of
Justice, and as head of the Department, the Attorney General can
exercise control over the immigration courts. Under federal regulation,
the Attorney General may  direct an immigration decision from the
Board  of Immigration Appeals to themself for review. The referral
power  then allows the Attorney General to either affirm or overrule
decisions from the Board of Immigration Appeals.
    Sessions's decision in Matter of A-B- is illustrative of the issues
with the Attorney General's referral power. As a political appointee,
the Attorney General can refer any case to himself or herself at their
discretion and overturn years of precedent. In doing so, the Attorney
General  interferes with  the  case-by-case adjudications by the
immigration courts. This delegation of power by Congress infringes on
the principle of separation of powers, as set out in the Constitution. It
is unwise  to let a political authority hold so much power  over
immigration  decisions and  intrude on  the independence  of the
immigration system. Decisions like Matter of A-B- illustrate how the
referral power can be easily abused and manipulated, and why limits
need to be placed on the Attorney General's referral power.


599


1.  Julie Menke is a J.D. candidate at Case Western Reserve University
    School of Law, Cleveland, Ohio, May 2020

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