September 5, 2013 / Modified sep 5, 2013 7:46 a.m.

NPR: Are Speeded-Up Immigration Cases Working?

Quick trials, followed by sentence and deportation, aim to cut repeat illegal crossings; Senate's bill calls for more.

Ted Robbins, NPR's Southwest correspondent based in Tucson, filed this report for Thursday's Morning Edition.

The Senate immigration bill calls for tripling a controversial federal court program called Operation Streamline. It now handles 70 cases a day in Tucson's federal courts and would be expanded to handle 210 cases, with a $50 million appropriation.

The program takes people caught crossing the border illegally, gives them prison sentences, then deports them. It's hugely expensive — but does it work?

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