Geographic EOIR Exploratory Tool

Geography-Based Dashboards for Exploring FOIA’d EOIR data

Introduction and a Note on Uncertainty

Welcome to the Geographic EOIR Exploratory Tool! These dashboard contain graphics and maps visualizing FOIA’d EOIR data. These data come directly from EOIR and has only received limited cleaning and validation. This dashboard is meant to help explore the data from a high level and to identify potential trends or areas of concern that may require more in-depth research. This dashboard is designed to help non-technical advocates look at what attributes and variables are available in the data. This dashboard CANNOT inform conclusive statements about immigration cases or proceeding.

National Overview

Click on a state below to see more information about each state and to access the state specific dashboard. Drag or zoom the map to find Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico

US States
Rank Name Number
of Cases
Total
Population
1 Texas 775,049.00 29,145,505.00
2 Florida 675,848.00 21,538,187.00
3 California 669,304.00 39,538,223.00
4 New York 540,370.00 20,201,249.00
5 New Jersey 240,490.00 9,288,994.00
6 Georgia 190,677.00 10,711,908.00
7 Massachusetts 169,372.00 7,029,917.00
8 Illinois 159,866.00 12,812,508.00
9 Virginia 145,600.00 8,631,393.00
10 North Carolina 123,329.00 10,439,388.00
11 Maryland 122,548.00 6,177,224.00
12 Louisiana 118,744.00 4,657,757.00
13 Pennsylvania 114,282.00 13,002,700.00
14 Tennessee 99,692.00 6,910,840.00
15 Colorado 99,027.00 5,773,714.00
16 Arizona 89,318.00 7,151,502.00
17 Washington 81,365.00 7,705,281.00
18 Ohio 77,509.00 11,799,448.00
19 Indiana 73,308.00 6,785,528.00
20 South Carolina 63,495.00 5,118,425.00
21 Connecticut 57,068.00 3,605,944.00
22 Utah 54,942.00 3,271,616.00
23 Minnesota 53,852.00 5,706,494.00
24 Kentucky 46,623.00 4,505,836.00
25 Alabama 43,744.00 5,024,279.00
26 Nevada 42,464.00 3,104,614.00
27 Michigan 38,898.00 10,077,331.00
28 Oklahoma 37,505.00 3,959,353.00
29 Missouri 31,611.00 6,154,913.00
30 Wisconsin 30,526.00 5,893,718.00
31 Nebraska 29,645.00 1,961,504.00
32 Kansas 28,836.00 2,937,880.00
33 Oregon 27,913.00 4,237,256.00
34 Iowa 23,665.00 3,190,369.00
35 Arkansas 21,175.00 3,011,524.00
36 New Mexico 20,684.00 2,117,522.00
37 Mississippi 19,369.00 2,961,279.00
38 Rhode Island 15,657.00 1,097,379.00
39 Delaware 13,768.00 989,948.00
40 Idaho 12,062.00 1,839,106.00
41 District of Columbia 10,286.00 689,545.00
42 Maine 10,135.00 1,362,359.00
43 South Dakota 6,399.00 886,667.00
44 New Hampshire 5,240.00 1,377,529.00
45 Hawaii 3,697.00 1,455,271.00
46 North Dakota 2,271.00 779,094.00
47 Wyoming 1,907.00 576,851.00
48 West Virginia 1,866.00 1,793,716.00
49 Montana 1,468.00 1,084,225.00
50 Puerto Rico 1,465.00 3,285,874.00
51 Vermont 860.00 643,077.00
52 Alaska 660.00 733,391.00

Demographics

Below is an interactive graph showing each the national origin of cases in the US over the last ten years. The x-axis (horizontal) represents the total number of cases from each country over the ten-year period. The bars for each country are divided by year to demonstrate changes over time. Hover over each bar segment to see more information about that country’s cases.

Below is an interactive graph showing the spoken languages other than Spanish and English of cases in the US over the last ten years. The x-axis (horizontal) represents the total number of cases from identified spoken language over the ten-year period. The bars for each language are divided by year to demonstrate changes over time. Hover over each bar segment to see more information about that language’s cases. Note that the totals and percent of cases speaking Spanish or English are stated in the footnote, and those numbers are a total from the ten-year period.

Below is a graph with colors representing the proportion of all cases in each year for each gender option. It is important to note here that, historically, a high proportion of cases have an unknown value for gender, but very generally assumptions about overall trends may be gleaned from the changes in proportions over time. Reminder: this is unverified data and not to be used for any conclusive statements.

Below is a graph showing the gender value counts over time. The lines represent the total number of cases with each gender designations.

The following graph uses country of origin and language as a proxy for race to determine the racial demographics of individuals. As always, country and language is an imperfect proxy, so consider that when interpreting these trends. Cases with people from the Caribbean and Africa have been categorized as Black. Case categorized as Hispanic have been omitted from the graph to improve readability.

The non-Black country categories are shown as the lighter part of the bars, and Caribbean and African categories are in full color. The numbers above the bars indicate the change in case counts for individuals categorized as Black. For example, 2015 saw -687 more cases categorized as Black than 2014, and 2023 saw 102,269 more cases categorized as Black than 2022.

Detention

The graph below displays the total cases for each year and are colored according to detention status. The second graph is the same data but without the nondetained portion of the bar for a zoomed in look at cases for individuals who are or were detained at some point.

Criminal case history

The two graphs below are similar to the gender graphs in that the first shows the proportions of criminal cases for cases in each year, and the second shows the counts over time for the total number of criminal cases, non-criminal cases, and unknown criminal status.