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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsSeattle Immigration Court starts 'mega' hearings, 'welfare checks' for kids
https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2026/jul/08/seattle-immigration-court-starts-mega-hearings-wel/Seattle Immigration Court starts mega hearings, welfare checks for kids
July 8, 2026 Updated Wed., July 8, 2026 at 7:03 p.m.
The kids came to Seattle Immigration Court with bows in their hair and colorful backpacks. Some held hands with the adults who brought them when they went to the bathroom or to get a drink of water.
Mateo and Sandra, 6 and 8, lay their heads on their uncle Eric Jaimes lap and closed their eyes. Living in Pullman, they had gotten up at 5 a.m. to drive from Mukilteo, where they were staying because all the hotels close to Seattle were full of World Cup visitors, Jaimes said. Theyre just kids, he said of his sleepy niece and nephew. They dont understand the complexity of what they were there to do.
So began the first so-called mega hearing at the court Tuesday for juveniles in deportation proceedings who entered the U.S. without a parent or guardian. Mega hearings are a new Trump administration tactic that have immigration courts nationwide scheduling an unusually large number of people to appear at the same time.
These large preliminary hearings started for adults and families in Seattle in late June. Tuesdays hearing kicked off what is expected to be four days of juvenile mega masters in Seattle before Judge Theresa Scala. Her first such hearing had 106 people scheduled throughout the day up to five times as many as at a typical preliminary hearing and revealed a new rationale for bringing some kids more frequently into court: checking on their welfare.
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Seattle Immigration Court starts 'mega' hearings, 'welfare checks' for kids (Original Post)
cbabe
4 hrs ago
OP
dalton99a
(96,521 posts)1. Immigration judges basically work for Stephen Miller
Thats not the purpose usually associated with what are called master calendar hearings, in which judges ask some basic questions like whether people have applied for asylum and if they need more time to find a lawyer. If they do, a judge will often schedule another hearing. Eventually at such a hearing, an immigrant will be asked to admit or deny the governments charges of being deportable, similar to an arraignment in criminal court.
Quick and perfunctory as many master calendar hearings are, people who miss them face large consequences: They typically receive a removal order in absentia. Some immigrant advocates believe the administration is holding mega hearings scheduling some at short notice in hopes many people wont show up and will get removal orders.
Scala issued 32 such removal orders at the end of Tuesdays hearing, according to Kayley Bebber, a Northwest Immigrant Rights Project attorney.
From the bench, Scala told the stepmother of a 15-year-old whose hearing date had been moved up a year that the court was rescheduling childrens hearings to check on their safety. The judge echoed that rationale in telling two children she wanted to see them three times a year, at one point referring to these summonses as welfare checks.
In another break from the past, Scala on Tuesday typically gave people a little over a month to find a lawyer for their next hearing. Previously, people often got six months or a year, according to Northwest Immigrant Rights Project lawyers. It seemed another instance of the court speeding up cases.
Quick and perfunctory as many master calendar hearings are, people who miss them face large consequences: They typically receive a removal order in absentia. Some immigrant advocates believe the administration is holding mega hearings scheduling some at short notice in hopes many people wont show up and will get removal orders.
Scala issued 32 such removal orders at the end of Tuesdays hearing, according to Kayley Bebber, a Northwest Immigrant Rights Project attorney.
From the bench, Scala told the stepmother of a 15-year-old whose hearing date had been moved up a year that the court was rescheduling childrens hearings to check on their safety. The judge echoed that rationale in telling two children she wanted to see them three times a year, at one point referring to these summonses as welfare checks.
In another break from the past, Scala on Tuesday typically gave people a little over a month to find a lawyer for their next hearing. Previously, people often got six months or a year, according to Northwest Immigrant Rights Project lawyers. It seemed another instance of the court speeding up cases.
cbabe
(7,061 posts)2. It's all grotesque.