Mississippi ยท Updated July 2026 ยท Verified by InmateAid

The Mississippi Immigration Court Process: What Detained Immigrants and Families Need to Know

Mississippi has no EOIR immigration court. Cases split between Memphis (north MS) and LaSalle/Oakdale (south MS detention). Adams County and Tallahatchie detainees route to Louisiana courts. Step-by-step guide.

Mississippi does not have its own EOIR immigration court. Immigration cases originating in Mississippi are divided between two court systems depending on geography and detention status. Non-detained and northern Mississippi cases route to the Memphis Immigration Court in Tennessee, which covers Mississippi north of Jackson. Detained respondents held at facilities in central and southern Mississippi - including Adams County Correctional Center in Natchez and Tallahatchie County Correctional Facility in Tutwiler - route to the Louisiana courts, primarily LaSalle and Oakdale.

This page explains which court handles Mississippi cases, how to find hearing information, and what the removal proceeding process looks like from start to finish.

Which Court Handles Mississippi Immigration Cases

The controlling court depends on where the person lives or is detained, and which DHS office issued the charging document.

Memphis Immigration Court (Mississippi north of Jackson and non-detained cases):

Brinkley Plaza

80 Monroe Avenue, Suite G-10

Memphis, Tennessee 38103

The Memphis court covers Mississippi north of Jackson - the northern portion of the state - under the Memphis DHS sub-office's geographic coverage. Non-detained Mississippi respondents in the northern portion of the state appear before the Memphis court.

LaSalle Immigration Court (Adams County Correctional Center detainees):

830 Pine Hill Road, P.O. Box 2179

Jena, Louisiana 71342

Email: LaSalle.Immigration.Court@usdoj.gov

The LaSalle court has jurisdiction over Adams County Correctional Center in Natchez, Mississippi. Detainees at Adams County have their cases at LaSalle, with hearings typically conducted by video teleconference.

Oakdale Immigration Court (South Louisiana and southern Mississippi area detainees):

1900 East Whatley Road

Oakdale, Louisiana 71463

Email: Oakdale.Immigration.Court@usdoj.gov

Depending on which facility holds a detainee in southern Mississippi or central Louisiana, the Oakdale court may also be the controlling court. Tallahatchie County Correctional Facility in Tutwiler (north-central Mississippi) may route to LaSalle or another Louisiana court depending on case assignment.

The EOIR Automated Case Information System at 800-898-7180 and the hearing notice are always the authoritative sources for which court controls a specific Mississippi case.

How Immigration Court Differs From Criminal Court

Immigration court is a civil proceeding, not a criminal one. Removal proceedings take place before an immigration judge employed by the Department of Justice through the Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR). The government is represented by a DHS attorney from the Office of the Principal Legal Advisor (OPLA). The person in proceedings is called the respondent.

Being in removal proceedings is not a criminal charge and does not result in a criminal sentence. The outcome is either a grant of relief that allows the person to remain in the United States in some legal status, or a removal order directing them to leave. There is no jury. There is no public defender equivalent.

The respondent has the right to be represented by an attorney at their own expense. There is no right to a government-appointed attorney in immigration court except in narrow circumstances involving serious mental competency concerns. Not having a free attorney does not mean going without legal help. Legal aid organizations and nonprofits provide free or reduced-cost representation. Resources appear at the end of this page.

A word on notario fraud: in many countries, a notario publico is a licensed legal professional. In the United States, that title has no equivalent legal standing. Notarios, immigration consultants, and non-lawyers cannot represent people in immigration court and cannot legally provide immigration advice. Verify any representative's credentials before paying. Only a licensed attorney or a DOJ-accredited representative can appear in immigration court on someone's behalf.

The Removal Proceeding: Step by Step

Step one: The Notice to Appear

A removal proceeding begins when DHS issues a Notice to Appear (NTA). This is the charging document in immigration court. It identifies the grounds for removal and directs the person to appear before an immigration court. The NTA may or may not include a hearing date when served. If it does not, a separate hearing notice will arrive by mail.

Keeping the court and DHS informed of any address change is required by law. If a hearing notice goes to an old address and the respondent does not appear, the immigration judge can issue an in absentia order of removal. That order is very difficult to undo. Use Form EOIR-33 to update the court and separately notify DHS OPLA. Both must be done within five days of any move.

Step two: The Master Calendar Hearing

The first court appearance is a master calendar hearing. These are short administrative sessions where the immigration judge manages the case, confirms the respondent understands the charges and their rights, asks about legal representation, and sets the schedule. Multiple cases are heard in the same session.

At master calendar, the respondent enters a plea to the NTA charges, identifies forms of relief they intend to seek, and establishes a timeline for filing applications and evidence. If the respondent does not have an attorney at the first hearing, they can generally ask for additional time to find one.

Step three: The Individual Hearing

After master calendar, the case moves to an individual hearing, also called a merits hearing. This is the full evidentiary proceeding where the respondent presents their case for relief from removal. The judge hears testimony, receives evidence, and may question the respondent and witnesses. The DHS trial attorney presents the government's case. The judge then issues a decision.

Common forms of relief include asylum, withholding of removal, protection under the Convention Against Torture, cancellation of removal, adjustment of status, and voluntary departure. Whether any form of relief is available depends on the specific facts and immigration history of each case.

Step four: Bond Hearings

If a respondent is detained, they may request a bond hearing before an immigration judge. A bond hearing is separate from the removal hearing. The judge determines whether the respondent should be released pending their case, and at what bond amount, based on flight risk and danger to the community.

Not all detained respondents are eligible for a standard bond hearing. Those subject to mandatory detention under federal law do not have that right before an immigration judge. They may seek release through the federal courts via a habeas corpus petition.

For Mississippi detainees, bond hearings are handled by whichever court controls their case - Memphis, LaSalle, or Oakdale. Confirm via ACIS at 800-898-7180.

Step five: The Decision and Appeal

After the individual hearing, the immigration judge issues a written decision. If relief is granted, the respondent may remain in the United States under the granted status. If removal is ordered, the respondent has the right to appeal to the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) in Falls Church, Virginia.

A BIA appeal must be filed within 30 calendar days of the immigration judge's decision. Missing that deadline forfeits the right to appeal.

If the BIA affirms the removal order, the respondent may seek review in the federal circuit court. Mississippi falls within the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, which covers Mississippi, Louisiana, and Texas. A petition for review must be filed in the Fifth Circuit within 30 days of the BIA's order.

How to Find Hearing Information

EOIR Automated Case Information System: 800-898-7180 (English and Spanish; TDD: 800-828-1120). Available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Online: acis.eoir.justice.gov

The A-Number (Alien Registration Number) is required to look up case information. It appears on immigration documents and on any EOIR hearing notice.

EOIR court finder by ZIP code: justice.gov/eoir/find-immigration-court-and-access-internet-based-hearings

Memphis Immigration Court (north MS and non-detained): 80 Monroe Avenue, Suite G-10, Memphis, Tennessee 38103

LaSalle Immigration Court (Adams County detainees): 830 Pine Hill Road, P.O. Box 2179, Jena, Louisiana 71342

Oakdale Immigration Court (south MS area detained): 1900 East Whatley Road, Oakdale, Louisiana 71463

If You Miss a Hearing

Missing an immigration court hearing is one of the most serious events in a removal case. If a respondent does not appear at a scheduled hearing and has been properly notified, the immigration judge will typically issue an in absentia order of removal.

An in absentia order can sometimes be reopened, but only in limited circumstances: if the respondent did not receive proper notice, or if exceptional circumstances beyond their control prevented attendance. If a hearing has been missed, contact an immigration attorney immediately.

How Detention Connects to the Court Process

Detention and removal proceedings are separate matters. A person can be in removal proceedings without being detained (non-detained docket), or detained while their case moves through court (detained docket). The detained docket generally moves faster.

For families with a detained loved one in Mississippi, the InmateAid guide to ICE detention in Mississippi covers Adams County Correctional Center in Natchez and Tallahatchie County Correctional Facility in Tutwiler, including how to locate a detained person, visiting, phone, and money access.

Legal Resources for Mississippi Respondents

Mississippi Center for Justice - mscenterforjustice.org | 601-352-2269 | Jackson - Civil rights and legal advocacy including immigration issues.

Mississippi Volunteer Lawyers Project - mvlp.net | 601-944-1980 | Jackson - Coordinates pro bono legal services including immigration representation.

Catholic Charities of Jackson - catholiccharitiesjackson.org | 601-355-8634 - Immigration legal services in the Jackson area.

CLINIC Affiliates - cliniclegal.org - Catholic Legal Immigration Network accredited organizations in Mississippi. Search by ZIP code.

RAICES - raicestexas.org | 210-222-0964 - Provides legal services for detained immigrants in Louisiana and Mississippi facilities.

EOIR Free Legal Services List - justice.gov/eoir/free-legal-services-providers - Lists attorneys and organizations providing free or low-cost representation for the Memphis, LaSalle, and Oakdale immigration courts.

Immigration Court Online Resource (ICOR) - Available through the EOIR website - Self-help materials for respondents navigating proceedings without an attorney.

This page provides factual information about the immigration court process as it applies to Mississippi. It is not legal advice and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Immigration law is complex and individual circumstances vary significantly. Consult a licensed immigration attorney or DOJ-accredited representative for advice specific to your situation.

Immigration law and agency policy change. Court jurisdictions, hearing locations, and procedures are subject to change without notice. Always verify current court information using the EOIR Automated Case Information System at 800-898-7180 or at justice.gov/eoir. The information on this page reflects conditions as of June 2026.

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