Albuquerque Journal

It’s catch and can’t release fast enough for asylum seekers

Many migrants are freed with no travel arrangemen­ts

- BY ELLIOT SPAGAT ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN DIEGO — President Donald Trump says he has ended “catch-and-release” for asylum seekers, but in cities along the Mexican border, it is catch and can’t release fast enough.

Since late October, the U.S. has been releasing asylum-seeking families so quickly they don’t even have time to make travel arrangemen­ts, blaming the situation on lack of detention space. Families are often given court dates without even having to pass initial screenings by asylum officers. They end up in shelters run by charities, or are dropped off at bus stations in border cities.

For one Salvadoran family, that dizzying series of events began when their 7-year-old daughter, Yariza Flores, landed on barbed wire after being hoisted over a border fence during their illegal crossing last month. She was rushed to a San Diego hospital to stop profuse bleeding.

Just four days later, U.S. authoritie­s dropped her off at a San Diego shelter with her parents and 3-yearold brother. They had no money, the clothes on their backs and an order given to them during their stint in U.S. custody to appear in immigratio­n court in Houston, where they planned to live with Yariza’s grandmothe­r and two aunts. They didn’t even have time to arrange for relatives to buy bus tickets before they were released.

“I feel happy because we’re finally … going to see my family,” the girl’s mother, Tania Escobar, said in the shelter. Her daughter sat nearby, all smiles, wearing a silver crown that a Border Patrol agent gave her and holding a stuffed animal from a doctor who treated the severe cuts on her lower back.

From California to Arizona to Texas, volunteers are scrambling to help families until they can arrange transporta­tion to relatives across the U.S. The San Diego Rapid Response Network, an advocacy coalition that runs the shelter that housed Yariza and her family, has served more than 4,000 people since opening in a church in late October, moving five times since then because it ran out of space.

U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t often coordinate­s with these shelters. On the December night that Yariza arrived, ICE brought 125 people in buses that came every half-hour. One night during Christmas week, the facility received 180 people, forcing it to use a church for the overflow.

The situation belies Trump’s assertion in a November tweet that “Catch and Release is an obsolete term. It is now Catch and Detain.”

The Trump administra­tion announced Dec. 20 that it would make asylum seekers who enter the U.S. on its southern border wait in Mexico while their claims wind through clogged immigratio­n courts, which can take years. But that “catch and return” policy has yet to take effect while the two countries work on mechanics; a legal challenge appears likely.

So, for now, many asylum-seeking families are being released in the U.S. before even they are ready. ICE dropped off hundreds of people daily at a bus station in El Paso, Texas, over the holidays. In Tucson, Ariz., charities have rented motel rooms when shelters are full.

ICE began shortening custody stays on Oct. 23 in response to the growing numbers of families crossing from Mexico. Officials say ICE previously ensured that families had travel plans first, but that it’s not legally required to do so.

At the San Diego shelter, asylum-seeking families, largely from Guatemala and Honduras, are asked about their health at the front door. A mobile clinic in the parking lot tends to people with ailments.

 ?? GREGORY BULL/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An official counts asylum seekers as they are dropped off from an immigratio­n detention center at a shelter in San Diego.
GREGORY BULL/ASSOCIATED PRESS An official counts asylum seekers as they are dropped off from an immigratio­n detention center at a shelter in San Diego.

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