Our Tools

"Alien" Justice Project uses public immigration-court datasets to turn difficult records into clearer, more accessible information. The goal is to make complex public data easier to read, easier to follow, and easier to understand for families navigating uncertainty.

The tools work by collecting publicly available immigration-court records, wait-time data, attorney-related metrics, and other relevant datasets. That information is then cleaned, organized, and translated into timelines, visual summaries, trend data, and plain-language explanations. Instead of leaving people to sort through dense records on their own, the platform presents information in a format that feels more practical, readable, and human-centered.

These tools are designed to help users better understand patterns in the data, including case timelines, backlog trends, and other key metrics connected to public immigration-court information. The purpose is not to provide legal advice, but to make public records more approachable and less confusing.

Because server and AI-related operating costs have risen significantly, keeping the full platform running indefinitely in its original form is no longer financially sustainable for a small nonprofit initiative. For that reason, the website and tool access are currently being updated while a more sustainable path forward is developed.

The mission remains the same: to make immigration data less overwhelming and more understandable for the people who need that clarity most.

How It Works

1

Collect

Gather public datasets

2

Clean

Remove errors & duplicates

3

Organize

Structure the data

4

Transform

Create visual tools

Public immigration datasets are collected, cleaned, organized, and transformed into visual tools and simplified explanations that are easier to interpret.

Data
Clean
Organize
Visualize

What the Tools Show

Timelines

Case duration & wait times

Backlog Trends

Pending cases over time

Case Metrics

Volume & disposition data

Summaries

Plain-language insights

Timelines, backlog trends, case metrics, and accessible summaries built from public records.

Contact us for the most recent metrics and data.

Important Note

The Alien Justice Project is not allowed to provide legal advice. The project focuses on making publicly available immigration data easier to understand.