Lawmakers ask DOJ why it declined to prosecute illegal immigrants previously deported with criminal conviction

California House Republican are asking the Justice Department for answers as to why it prosecutions of illegal immigrants convicted of crimes has declined.

An illegal immigrant sneaks through a hole in the U.S.-Mexico border wall in El Paso, Texas. (Patrick T. Fallon/AFP via Getty Images)

The four lawmakers are asking the DOJ to provide information on the number of prosecutions for previously deported illegal immigrants convicted of crimes while in the U.S., and information on prosecutorial guidelines for previously deported illegal immigrants. 

Fox News Digital has reached out to the DOJ. 

California state Rep. Bill Essayli spent four years prosecuting cases for the Justice Department in the Central District of California, which covers several counties, including Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino counties. 

Many prosecutors cut their teeth on those types of cases where a suspect was previously deported after committing a crime in the U.S. and then crosses back into the U.S. illegally, which is a felony, Essayli told Fox News Digital. 

"The law is clear that these are felonies and should be prosecuted," he said. 

He said court records revealed that prosecutors in his old office went from prosecuting hundreds of such cases in previous years to just five in 2023. 

NYC MAYOR CONTINUES CALLS FOR SANCTUARY CITY AMENDMENT TO ALLOW DEPORTATION OF VIOLENT ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS

U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland (Eduardo Munoz/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

He noted that many prosecutors and defense lawyers don't like those kinds of cases because they see the suspect as having served time for their crime before being deported, and are just returning illegally to the U.S. again to be with family or for other reasons. 

"A lot of prosecutors, they lean left, and they don't like these cases, and they find them annoying and a burden," he said. 

Calvert blamed the number of illegal crossings on Biden's border policies, which have come under heavy criticism by Republicans. 

"The blatant disregard of our federal laws by illegal immigrants and the lack of enforcement by our nation’s court system is just another example of President Biden’s open-border policies that have created the humanitarian and national security crisis we see at the border and in every community across the country," he said in a statement. 

WHICH CITIES, COUNTIES, AND STATES IN THE US ARE ‘SANCTUARY’ JURISDICTIONS? 

Despite the notion that many migrants are coming to the U.S. for work, some have bad intentions, Essayli said. 

"These are the bad guys. This isn't the migrant who's coming here to work on a farm," he said. "This is a convicted criminal. There's no question about it… and the government is allowing to roam freely inside the United States knowing that they have a criminal record."

"These are the most dangerous people and that is who this U.S. attorney's office is allowing to walk free," he said. 

Louis Casiano is a reporter for Fox News Digital. Story tips can be sent to louis.casiano@fox.com.

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