威尼斯人娱乐场

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INS Boards of Special Inquiry (BSI) Records

Beginning in the 1880s, Congress passed a series of laws that excluded certain categories of immigrants from entering the United States. The Immigration Act of 1891 () created a federal immigration office charged with enforcing these exclusions. Specifically, the act required that federal immigration officers be stationed at major ports of entry to inspect immigrants upon arrival. These officers, known as Immigration Inspectors, were empowered to deny immigrants entry to the United States if the immigrants fell into one of the excluded classes. Inspectors鈥 decisions were final unless appealed directly to the Superintendent of Immigration (later known as the Commissioner-General of Immigration).

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Minutes of the Board of Special Inquiry at the INS San Francisco Office, July 1904

(威尼斯人娱乐场 Identifier )

The Immigration Act of 1893 () revised this procedure by establishing Boards of Special Inquiry (BSIs) to review each exclusion case. These boards consisted of three Immigration Inspectors who heard testimony and accepted evidence in excluded immigrants鈥 cases. During these hearings, immigrants usually had the opportunity to explain their situation and the reasons why they should be admitted. Initially, all three members of the board had to agree to admit an excluded immigrant for that immigrant to be allowed into the United States; later, this provision was amended so that the majority of the board (two of three members) could admit an immigrant. If the BSI upheld the exclusion, the immigrant was deported. Subsequent immigration acts, including the Immigration Act of 1917 (, Sec. 17), further codified BSIs鈥 authority over exclusion and deportation procedures.

Between 1892 and 1924, ten percent or more of arriving immigrants were detained every day for a BSI hearing. Immigration Inspectors stationed at ports of entry often initially excluded immigrants under the 鈥渓ikely to become a public charge鈥 (LPC) category because the immigrants lacked funds or did not have friends or relatives nearby who could support them. BSIs typically overturned these exclusions if an immigrant aid society accepted responsibility for the immigrant. If the BSI affirmed their exclusion under any category, however, immigrants could appeal their case to the Commissioner-General of Immigration in Washington, DC.

The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 () eliminated BSIs and instead established special inquiry officers to review and decide deportation cases.

Records Overview

The 威尼斯人娱乐场 and Records Administration (NARA) does not house records of all BSI hearings ever held. In most instances, the federal agency in charge of immigration鈥攖he Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), now known as the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS)鈥攐nly preserved records of BSI appeals for eventual transfer to NARA. BSIs excluded and ordered the deportation of relatively few immigrants who had BSI hearings, and of those, even fewer appealed the decisions. Thus, NARA鈥檚 records document only a small fraction of all immigrants who had a BSI hearing.

Records Locations

BSI records are found in Record Group 85, Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service. The majority of these records are housed at the 威尼斯人娱乐场 Building in Washington, DC, with other INS headquarters-level records. Select BSI records from INS district offices have survived and are housed at NARA鈥檚 field offices. These records are listed below, along with their 威尼斯人娱乐场 Identifiers (NAIDs). Search the by the NAIDs for more detailed series descriptions.

Accordion

For more information, please email archives1reference@nara.gov.

Unrestricted series:

  • Registers of Japanese, Filipinos, and Hawaiians Held for Boards of Special Inquiry at San Francisco, California, 9/2/1928鈥2/7/1942 (NAID )
    • Microfilmed as A3408
    • Digitized in the
  • Minutes of the Boards of Special Inquiry at the San Francisco Office, 3/29/1899鈥2/10/1909 (NAID )
    • Microfilmed as M1387
    • Digitized in the
  • Records of Persons Held for Boards of Special Inquiry at the San Pedro, California, Office, 11/3/1930鈥9/27/1936 (NAID )
    • Microfilmed as M1852
    • Digitized on and
  • Registers of Persons Held for Boards of Special Inquiry at the San Francisco, California, Office, 2/1910鈥5/1941 (NAID )
    • Microfilmed as M1388
    • Digitized on and

Restricted series:

  • Subject and Policy Files, 1906鈥1957 (Entry A1 9; NAID )
    • Files 55,800 and above are subject to privacy restrictions. For more information, see INS Subject and Policy Files.
    • A subject index has been microfilmed as T458 and is available online via Ancestry.com (database title: 鈥淯.S., Subject Index to Correspondence and Case Files of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, 1903鈥1959鈥). Relevant subject headings include:
      • B.S.I. Minutes
      • Board(s) of Special Inquiry
      • Boards of Special Inquiry鈥揇esignations
    • The USCIS Genealogy Program has a name index to this series. If you are looking for a specific individual鈥檚 BSI case file, consider requesting a name index search to obtain relevant case file numbers. For more information, please see the USCIS Genealogy Program鈥檚 page.
  • E, V, and T Files, 1951鈥1954 (P 777; NAID )
    • Records less than 75 years old are subject to privacy restrictions.

For more information, please email ftworth.archives@nara.gov.

  • Statements of Aliens and Related Findings of a Board of Special Inquiry [District 23, El Paso], 1905鈥1908 (NAID )

For more information, please email philadelphia.archives@nara.gov.

  • Decisions of the Board of Special Inquiry [District 4, Philadelphia], 1893鈥1909 (NAID )
    • Microfilmed as M1500
    • Digitized in the

For more information, please email sanbruno.archives@nara.gov.

  • Register of Japanese Arrivals and Register of Chinese, Japanese, and Koreans Detained for Boards of Special Inquiry [District 17, Honolulu], 6/27/1899鈥6/20/1905 (NAID )

  • Transcripts of Board of Special Inquiry Hearings for Chinese Applying for Admission [District 17, Honolulu], 5/20/1904鈥4/15/1924 (NAID )

  • Appeal Case Files of Japanese and Korean Aliens Denied Entry by Boards of Special Inquiry [District 17, Honolulu], 1917鈥1940 (NAID )

  • Board of Special Inquiry Case Files [District 17, Honolulu], 1925鈥1929 (NAID )

  • Index to Immigration Investigation Case Files [District 17, Honolulu], 1985鈥1986 (NAID )

Additional Resources

  • , U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS)

  • , USCIS

  • , in A Guide to Interpreting Passenger List Annotations by Marian L. Smith (former historian at the USCIS)

  • , U.S. Department of Justice

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