January 13, 2026
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Trump DOJ to Close San Francisco Immigration Court, Shift 120,000 Cases to Concord

The Justice Department’s Executive Office for Immigration Review has informed staff it will shut down the San Francisco Immigration Court by the end of 2026 and transfer all personnel and roughly 120,935 pending cases to the newer Concord Immigration Court 30 miles away or to remote dockets. An internal email from Chief Immigration Judge Teresa Riley, obtained by NPR, confirms the closure, which comes after a 2025 purge in which nearly 100 immigration judges were fired nationwide and San Francisco’s bench was slashed from 21 judges to four plus one supervisor. EOIR spokesperson Kathryn Mattingly says the move is driven by cost‑effectiveness, but former and current employees describe it as part of a broader campaign to pressure judges to accelerate deportations and ‘fall in line,’ with at least two other courts in Aurora, Colo., and Oakdale, La., already left with no sitting judges. The Concord court itself has been losing judges and staff and already carries a growing backlog, raising concerns that consolidations will only deepen the national logjam while forcing immigrants, lawyers and witnesses to travel farther for hearings or shift to remote proceedings. The decision highlights how the administration is reshaping the immigration‑court system through layoffs and closures rather than adding capacity, a trend immigrant advocates and some judges say is constricting due process even as backlogs reach record highs.

Immigration & Demographic Change Department of Justice and Courts

📌 Key Facts

  • EOIR has ordered the San Francisco Immigration Court to close by the end of 2026, with all staff reassigned to the Concord Immigration Court.
  • San Francisco’s court has been reduced from 21 immigration judges in early 2025 to four judges and one supervisor as of early 2026 after a wave of firings and departures.
  • Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse data show San Francisco’s remaining judges have about 120,935 pending cases, all of which will be shifted to Concord or handled remotely.
  • NPR’s tally indicates the Trump administration fired nearly 100 immigration judges nationwide in 2025, including at least 19 long‑serving judges and multiple assistant chief judges.
  • At least two other immigration courts, in Aurora, Colorado, and Oakdale, Louisiana, currently have no judges on the bench, fueling expectations of further closures or consolidations.

📊 Relevant Data

The U.S. immigration court backlog reached nearly 3.8 million pending deportation cases by July 2025, primarily due to heightened enforcement actions, expanded border filings, and limited judicial resources.

Immigration Court Statistics: Case Outcomes, Backlog, and Impact ... — Docketwise

San Francisco's population decreased by 5.41% from the 2020 census to 2025, with a current estimated population of 835,987, amid ongoing housing affordability issues prompting outflows.

San Francisco - California - World Population Review — World Population Review

Immigration accounted for up to 100% of housing demand growth in some U.S. regions and roughly two-thirds of total rental demand growth nationwide in recent years, contributing to rising rental costs.

Fact Check Team: Immigration's impact on rising U.S. rental costs — The National Desk

As of 2023, among U.S. immigrants, 27% reported as single-race Asian, 20% as White, 9% as Black, and 1% as American Indian or Alaska Native, with the immigrant population making up 15.4% of the U.S. total in 2025.

Frequently Requested Statistics on Immigrants and Immigration in the United States — Migration Policy Institute

The surge in immigration after 2022, during the Biden administration, contributed to the immigration court backlog, with net immigration projected to increase post-2025.

An Update to the Demographic Outlook, 2025 to 2055 — Congressional Budget Office

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