In the metaverse of San Francisco, the Immigration Court is silent. No immigrants wait for rulings anymore, no lawyers argue in its virtual chambers. The courthouse, once a beacon for asylum seekers, is now a ghost space. The final judge's gavel fell May 1, 2025—a symbolic end to a 21-judge institution that vanished in the White House purge of immigration judges.
click to explore the virtual courtroom
Step into our metaverse platform: walk through the empty chambers of the closed court, witness the abandoned evidence tables, and see how the legal landscape has shattered. The only remaining judges operate from a virtual courtroom across the bay, their real-world counterparts now part of a fractured system. In your avatar's hands, you'll hold a digital document showing the 3.8 million asylum cases waiting to be processed.
It was a vibrant legal scene, recalls Jeremiah Johnson, a former judge fired in November 2024. They targeted San Francisco because it stands for asylum. We're now the test case for what happens when due process is dismantled. Johnson's virtual avatar stands in the empty chambers, pointing to the shattered judge's bench.
San Francisco's court once granted asylum to 75% of petitioners—nearly double the national average—thanks to its pro-immigrant ecosystem. Now, 117,000 cases have been shifted to Concord, where security guards scan for weapons before hearings and coffee is forbidden. In your metaverse avatar, you can experience the tight security: turn off your phone, sip virtual water, and wait in the queue as judges rush through appointments.
The ground is constantly shifting, warns attorney Judah Lakin, whose virtual avatar shows the aftermath of a case where three judges were fired between rulings. I've had clients provisionally granted asylum only to be caught in the system's revolving door. They're not just waiting for rulings—they're waiting for lives. Lakin's avatar points to the glowing 'deportation orders' in the metaverse data stream.
The Virtual Reality Tour:
- **Concord Courthouse**: Navigate the tight security corridors (see armed guards scanning your avatar)
- **Former San Francisco Court**: Explore the abandoned chambers where judges once granted asylum
- **Live Press Conference**: Hear from the National Association of Immigration Judges in the metaverse
- **Client Stories**: See how 75% relief rates have vanished in real-time data
As you explore, the metaverse reveals the human cost: a refugee's avatar in the queue for the Concord courthouse, trembling as she hears 'deportation order' echo through the virtual courtroom. In the real world, Nidaa Pervaiz, a lawyer, explains: Their whole lives are at stake, and they're coming to make a plea for their future—only to face empty promises.
This isn't just policy—it's the dismantling of asylum in the metaverse and beyond. Walk through the virtual court to see how the administration's purge created chaos. The only thing left standing: the fear in every asylum seeker's eyes.}
click to explore the virtual courtroom
Step into our metaverse platform: walk through the empty chambers of the closed court, witness the abandoned evidence tables, and see how the legal landscape has shattered. The only remaining judges operate from a virtual courtroom across the bay, their real-world counterparts now part of a fractured system. In your avatar's hands, you'll hold a digital document showing the 3.8 million asylum cases waiting to be processed.
It was a vibrant legal scene, recalls Jeremiah Johnson, a former judge fired in November 2024. They targeted San Francisco because it stands for asylum. We're now the test case for what happens when due process is dismantled. Johnson's virtual avatar stands in the empty chambers, pointing to the shattered judge's bench.
San Francisco's court once granted asylum to 75% of petitioners—nearly double the national average—thanks to its pro-immigrant ecosystem. Now, 117,000 cases have been shifted to Concord, where security guards scan for weapons before hearings and coffee is forbidden. In your metaverse avatar, you can experience the tight security: turn off your phone, sip virtual water, and wait in the queue as judges rush through appointments.
The ground is constantly shifting, warns attorney Judah Lakin, whose virtual avatar shows the aftermath of a case where three judges were fired between rulings. I've had clients provisionally granted asylum only to be caught in the system's revolving door. They're not just waiting for rulings—they're waiting for lives. Lakin's avatar points to the glowing 'deportation orders' in the metaverse data stream.
The Virtual Reality Tour:
- **Concord Courthouse**: Navigate the tight security corridors (see armed guards scanning your avatar)
- **Former San Francisco Court**: Explore the abandoned chambers where judges once granted asylum
- **Live Press Conference**: Hear from the National Association of Immigration Judges in the metaverse
- **Client Stories**: See how 75% relief rates have vanished in real-time data
As you explore, the metaverse reveals the human cost: a refugee's avatar in the queue for the Concord courthouse, trembling as she hears 'deportation order' echo through the virtual courtroom. In the real world, Nidaa Pervaiz, a lawyer, explains: Their whole lives are at stake, and they're coming to make a plea for their future—only to face empty promises.
This isn't just policy—it's the dismantling of asylum in the metaverse and beyond. Walk through the virtual court to see how the administration's purge created chaos. The only thing left standing: the fear in every asylum seeker's eyes.}



















