Big gap in California immigration asylum cases in LA, SF

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The dream of staying in California is becoming less of a lock for thousands of asylum seekers.

Remaining in the United States often comes down which judge will determine their fate — and the difference is particularly stark in between San Francisco and Los Angeles.

More liberal judges in the San Francisco denied just 28.5% of cases between 2020 and late 2025, while Los Angeles judges were right on the national average in denying almost 60% of applicants, according to data compiled by the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse.

Last quarter, nearly 80% of migrants seeking asylum in the US were sent packing, as immigration judges have taken a tougher line under the Trump administration.

Katie G. Mullins had among the highest rates of denying asylum for California judges between 2020 and 2025. Linkendin/Katie Mullins

“It’s having a real impact,” said Andrew Arthur, a fellow at the Center for Immigration Policy and a former immigration judge.

“The Trump Administration is doing all kinds of things to drive down the asylum grant rate.”

Judge Tara Naselow-Nahas, who was appointed during the Obama administration in November 2009, had the highest denial rates in California across two court locations — Los Angeles-North and Van Nuys — where she handled a combined 525 cases and issued denials in roughly 91.6% of them, according to TRAC data.

Almost 30% of Naselow-Nahas’ cases involved people from El-Salvador.


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Judge Kevin W. Riley, who was part of the same class of new judges as Naselow-Nahas, also ranked highest among California judges in denying asylum between 2020 and late 2025.

Riley has served in three court jurisdictions across Southern California over the last five years, denying more than 99% of asylum seekers in 350 cases in north Los Angeles and Adelanto federal courthouses, according to TRAC data.

That denial rate dropped during Riley’s time in Van Nuys, but his overall rejection rate was still about 88%.

Katie G. Mullins, who was appointed to the bench in 2023 and oversaw 205 cases in Adelanto Immigration Court, denied asylum in 94.6% of her decisions, according to TRAC data.

Shira M. Levine was fired after granting asylum or other relief at a higher rate than any judge in California. Instagram/@acaciajustice

Meanwhile, Shira M. Levine, who was appointed to San Francisco’s federal immigration bench in 2021 during the Biden administration, was the state’s most lenient judge in granting asylum, denying just 2.1% of the 1,165 cases she oversaw — up until the Trump administration fired her in September.

President Trump has been on a rampage in removing immigration judges perceived as too far to the left. San Francisco’s immigration court lost 12 of its 21 judges just last year.

An accompanying spike in deportations has occurred during that same time.

In December, 38,215 illegal migrants were given the boot, 50% above the 19,265 in December 2023 under President Joe Biden and 35% more than the 24,979 cases in December 2024, according to TRAC.

Protesters march against policies of President Trump near the White House on Jan. 20, 2026. Mehmet Eser/SOPA Images/Shutterstock

Judge Frank Seminerio, in San Francisco, heard the most immigration cases of any judge in California over the last five years, denying 65.6% of asylum seekers, according to TRAC data.

His denial rate was far lower than that of former colleague Nathan Aina, a judge who reportedly had the nickname “quiet assassin” among San Francisco lawyers for rejecting almost all asylum claims. TRAC data shows Aina denied 94.2% of the cases he heard in San Francisco.

KSL NewsRadio reported last July that Aina accepted a federal workers’ buyout offered by the Trump administration.

Nearly 80% of migrants seeking asylum in the U.S. were denied last quarter under the Trump administration. REUTERS

California immigration courts make asylum decisions involving applicants from all over the world, including China and Latin American countries like Colombia, Guatemala, El Salvador, and Honduras.

The wide differential in how asylum seekers in California are granted, given other avenues of relief, or denied mirrors a similar trend in New York.

“It’s a mighty big gap” between judges, said Andrew Arthur, a fellow at the Center for Immigration Policy and a former immigration judge.

“Maybe one judge just gets very meritorious cases, and maybe one judge gets non-meritorious cases. But it is a significant issue.”

The federal government can intervene to appeal a judge’s ruling to grant asylum.

“I’m glad that immigration judges are the first adjudicators,” Arthur said, “not the last adjudicators.”



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