Wrapping snow in blankets. Can it save the ski season?
Warming temperatures and snow droughts in the West threatens a billion-dollar industry. One ski area is experimenting with insulated blankets to keep snow from melting.
Everyone at @boisestatepublicradio.org is SOOOO proud of our intern Jaime Geary, who just had a feature air on @npr.org's All Things Considered. A major professional achievement for anyone in the business, let alone someone so early in their career. A name to watch.
www.npr.org/2026/02/18/n...
19.02.2026 00:42
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U.S. has a quarter fewer immigration judges than it did a year ago. Here's why
The continued drain of personnel from the already strained immigration court system has contributed to depleted staff morale, mounting case backlogs β and floundering due process.
Immigration courts by the #βs:
- 25% less judges
- 400 less legal assistants + clerks
- 12 courts lost over half their judges, two have no full time IJs
- supervisors spread across several locations
We break down a clear picture of what is happening across the country:
www.npr.org/2026/02/23/g...
23.02.2026 16:12
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Refugees in the U.S. could be arrested under new immigration memo
The move is another Trump administration effort to limit legal pathways to migration or resettlement, after already curbing the number of admitted refugees and re-reviewing those admitted under the Bi...
Last week I spoke on the NPR Politics podcast about how USCIS was largely ignored during Congress's two oversight hearings.
This week, USCIS and ICE issue a joint memo saying refugees could be detained if they are not granted a green card within a year. www.npr.org/2026/02/19/g...
19.02.2026 15:46
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ICE's chief testified today that dozens of agents have been investigated for abuse in the last year.
So how many have actually been punished and fired?
He wouldn't say.
www.npr.org/2026/02/12/g...
13.02.2026 02:38
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Top 5 takeaways from the House immigration oversight hearing
The hearing underscored how deeply divided Republicans and Democrats remain on top-level changes to immigration enforcement in the wake of the shootings of two U.S. citizens.
Three hours of testimony for the top three leaders of Trumpβs immigration enforcement agencies. There were some moments of bipartisan concern but there are still wide gaps on solutions. Read my wrap before we do it again Thursday:
www.npr.org/2026/02/10/n...
10.02.2026 21:59
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Immigration courts fast-track hearings for Somali asylum claims
Their lawyers fear the notices are merely the first step toward the removal without due process of Somali asylum applicants in the country.
SCOOP: Immigration courts rapidly scheduled and rescheduled Somali asylum seekers to have hearings suddenly within the next four weeks.
The move could fast-track their deportation and limit due process, multiple lawyers with over 100 cases affected tell me.
www.npr.org/2026/02/09/n...
09.02.2026 17:47
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Confirming reporting on WH Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Millerβs latest statement RE the shooting of Alex Pretti:
28.01.2026 02:12
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In case youβre wondering:
Iβm told DHS did not classify the death of Renee Macklin Good as a βdeath in custodyβ like they did Pretti. As such, that gives ICE 30 days to send a review or notice to Congress hence the faster timeline for this one.
28.01.2026 02:11
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Internal review contradicts White House narrative of Pretti's death
The preliminary assessment from Customs and Border Protection makes no mention of Alex Pretti attacking officers or threatening them with a weapon β as the administration first described the incident.
TONIGHT: A preliminary DHS review contradicts the Trump admin's initial narrative of the shooting of Alex Pretti. The review makes no mention of Pretti attacking officers or threatening them with a weapon, or that he was the one initially disturbing them.
www.npr.org/2026/01/27/g...
28.01.2026 01:20
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Minneapolis killings put a focus on use of body cameras
Federal immigration enforcement authorities are facing scrutiny and criticism over their tactics, including the lack of body-worn cameras, following the killing of two U.S. citizens in Minneapolis.
The surge of immigration agents in Minneapolis show just how strained resources are as pressures increase. Court documents show that the ICE field office is not equipped w/ body cameras + definitely not ready to give them to all the agents on the ground. My latest:
www.npr.org/2026/01/27/n...
27.01.2026 13:10
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SCOOP: 27 military lawyers are expected to onboard as temporary immigration judges this week. They will train with 6 new permanent judges.
I previewed the move in my story regarding the closure of courtrooms in San Francisco.
New judges will go to CO, MA, AZ, CA, UT, MD, + LA.
14.01.2026 19:43
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Trump administration to shutter an immigration court, adding to judges' backlog
The planned closure of the San Francisco Immigration Court comes as immigration judges spent the last year facing pressure to move through their caseloads faster and streamline deportations.
The San Francisco Immigration Court is slated to close by yearβs end. That leaves 120,000 cases in limbo. Per our count, SF is down to 4 judges from 21
The closure comes as the admin terminated 100 judges in 2025 + more JAGs start this week.
My latest w scoopy nuggets: www.npr.org/2026/01/13/g...
13.01.2026 13:28
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ICE officer accused of excessive force, then sent back to work despite active probe
DHS's handling of the incident raises questions about the department's oversight mechanisms to investigate employee misconduct.
SCOOP: @repdangoldman.bsky.social received a letter from DHS Secretary Kristi Noem outlining an investigation into an ICE officer put on leave after pushing a woman to the ground.
But the letter raises questions about how DHS investigates employee misconduct. www.npr.org/2025/12/24/n...
24.12.2025 13:06
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NPR analysis shows skyrocketing number of 'no-shows' in immigration court
More immigrants are not showing up for their mandatory immigration court hearings compared to prior years, an NPR analysis shows, allowing the government to order their immediate deportation.
The number of people not showing up to court + being ordered deported skyrocketed, according to our early analysis of the data. Lawyers cite a few reasons: fear of being detained, DOJ sending notices to wrong places, other hiccups in delivery.
My latest: www.npr.org/2025/12/22/n...
22.12.2025 14:39
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How Trump is remaking one agency to aid his deportation push
The Trump administration's changes to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services are taking an axe to the agency's traditional mission of ensuring people lawfully immigrate and stay in the U.S.
This year, the Trump admin has taken an axe to USCIS, the agency where people go to seek things like green cards, as they look to reduce legal migration.
It's rocking the agency from the inside, crushing morale and prompting resignations.
My latest: www.npr.org/2025/12/10/n...
10.12.2025 13:48
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I talked to @ximenabustillo.bsky.social about the firing of immigration judges
I noted that the way the Trump administration is approaching the immigration courts reflects a really high prioritization of immigration enforcement & its whole of govt. approach to increasing deportations
06.11.2025 15:13
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But the patterns in hiring, rehiring + firing do highlight priorities for this administration as they know more people will go through immigration courts as more are arrested. And they have criticized the makeup of the court as βinferiorβ and not committed to upholding the law.
06.11.2025 13:53
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There are exceptions to the patterns (as in most trends) and the patterns donβt indicate intent, since we still donβt know. But 11 new permanent judges, with long law enforcement backgrounds, were recently added to the bench. To be clear - that doesnβt mean theyβre not fair.
06.11.2025 13:53
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Fired immigration judges tell me they werenβt given a reason for their terminations. 12 were terminated after their 2 year probationary period. For months, dozens told me they worried their background in immigrant defense resulted in terminations. So I wanted to do the math.
06.11.2025 13:53
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Immigration judges come from various backgrounds. Historically, they did come from an enforcement (ICE) legal career. These courts are under the DOJ, which experts say has always limited the separation between policy enforcement and adjudication of cases. Now thatβs being tested.
06.11.2025 13:53
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The DOJ has been firing judges with immigrant defense backgrounds
NPR's data analysis shows that the DOJ has tended to fire judges with immigrant defense backgrounds in its recent rounds of dismissals.
Immigration judges with prior immigrant defense work make up the largest share of those fired by the Trump admin. NPR identified 70 fired immigration judges. The changes have at least shifted perception of fairness in these courts
My latest investigation: www.npr.org/2025/11/06/g...
06.11.2025 13:53
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DOJ hires immigration judges after months of layoffs
Judges will soon take the bench across 16 states, the Justice Department said. These include courts that saw the biggest losses of judges this year.
After over 125 immigration judges have been fired or quit, DOJ has brought on 36 to the bench -- including 25 military lawyers.
Their backgrounds (at least what DOJ has promoted) shows a priority for those with prior DHS experience.
My latest:
www.npr.org/2025/10/24/g...
24.10.2025 23:14
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