Introduction
The Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR) selected four new assistant chief immigration judges on August 23, 2019. Assistant chief immigration judges oversee the operations of the immigration courts to which they are assigned. In addition to these oversight responsibilities, assistant chief immigration judges also hear cases.
Below, we will provide biographical information about each of the new assistant chief immigration judges courtesy of the EOIR notice [PDF version]. Please see our topic index for all of our posts on new immigration judges, administrative immigration judges, and members of the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) [see index].
New Assistant Chief Immigration Judges
The four new assistant chief immigration judges will each serve on one immigration court.
Theresa Holmes-Simmons, Assistant Chief Immigration Judge, Charlotte Immigration Court
- 2008-2019: Immigration judge at the Charlotte Immigration Court
- 1998-2008: Immigration judge at the New York City Immigration Court
- 1996-1998: Assistant district counsel for the former Immigration and Naturalization Service in New York
- 1994-1996: Special prosecutor and assistant attorney general, New York State Attorney General's Office
- 1988-1994: Assistant district attorney with the New York County District Attorney's Office
- Juris Doctorate from Rutgers University School of Law in 1988
Judge Holmes-Simmons served as an immigration judge on the New York City and Charlotte Immigration Courts for 21 years. Prior to serving as an immigration judge and working as an attorney for the former Immigration and Naturalization Service, Judge Holmes-Simmons worked for eight years as a prosecutor with the New York State Attorney General and the Manhattan District Attorney's Office. She has an undergraduate degree from CUNY Brooklyn College.
Christopher R. Seppanen, Assistant Chief Immigration Judge, Detroit Immigration Court
- 2017-2019: Immigration judge at the Cleveland Immigration Court
- 2002-2017: Administrative law judge for the State of Michigan in Lansing, Michigan (2014-17 Chief administrative law judge; 2012-2014 Deputy chief administrative law judge; 2002-2012 Supervisory administrative law judge)
- 1997-2002: Administrative law judge for the State of Michigan, in Manistee, Michigan
- 1996-1997: Trial attorney for the Office of Public Advocacy, in Alpena, Michigan
- Juris Doctor from the University of Kentucky School of Law in 1993
Before his two-year stint as an immigration judge on the Cleveland Immigration Court, Judge Seppanen served as an administrative law judge in Michigan for two decades, giving him extensive experience in a variety of administrative judicial settings. He is the only one of the new class of assistant chief immigration judges to be appointed to serve at a different immigration court than the one he had been serving on as a regular immigration judge. We covered his appointment as an immigration judge in an earlier post [see blog].
Hugo R. Martinez, Assistant Chief Immigration Judge, Fort Worth Immigration Adjudication Center
- 2018-2019: Immigration judge at the Fort Worth Immigration Adjudication Center
- 2010-2018: Assistant U.S. attorney at the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Texas in Corpus Christi, Texas
- 2005-2010: Assistant district attorney for the Tarrant County District Attorney's Office in Fort Worth, Texas
- 2004-2004: Private practice
- Juris Doctor from Texas A&M School of Law in 2004
Judge Martinez served as a prosecutor at the Federal and State levels for 13 years prior to taking the immigration bench in November 2018. We covered his initial appointment as an immigration judge at the Fort Work Immigration Adjudication Center in a separate post [see blog].
Grady A. Crooks, Assistant Chief Immigration Judge, LaSalle Immigration Court
- 2018-2019: Immigration judge at the LaSalle Immigration Court
- 2017-2017: Assistant U.S. attorney at the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Western District of Louisiana in Shreveport, Louisiana
- 2005-2016: Attorney for the U.S. Air Force in a number of locations
- Juris Doctor from Rutgers University School of Law in 2004
Save for one year as a Federal prosecutor, Judge Crooks' experience came as an attorney for the U.S. Air Force prior to taking the immigration bench at the LaSalle Immigration Court in late 2018. He was part of the same class of immigration judges as Judge Martinez (see above), and we covered his initial appointment in the same post [see blog].
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