Backers of a two-year-old New Jersey program that provides free legal aid to people in federal immigration detention say it is working, after the rate of release skyrocketed among detainees who had a pro bono attorney.
A report released on Wednesday found that 52% of immigrants represented by an attorney in the program were released from detention, compared with just 18% of people without representation who were released in New Jersey.
Advocates said the Detention and Deportation Defense Initiative (DDDI) is especially important now, as many ICE detention centers continue to face coronavirus outbreaks.
“Our report finds that DDDI helps detained individuals secure their release, thereby safeguarding public health,” said Liana Katz, a Rutgers University Ph.D. student and a research fellow with Make the Road New Jersey, who prepared the report.
The state allocated $2.1 million for the program in the 2018 fiscal year and another $3.1 million in the 2019 fiscal year. It is unclear how much funding the program will see in the next budget, which Gov. Phil Murphy and lawmakers continue to work on as revenues shrink due to the coronavirus pandemic.
“It is absolutely without question that our commitment to this work remains steadfast,” said Deborah Cornavaca, the governor’s deputy chief of staff. “Now our job is to work together to see that we can continue the funding for the program.”
People do not have a right to government-appointed counsel in immigration court. The program, which Katz said is only the second of its kind in the nation, funds outside attorneys who take on low-income immigrant clients for free.