Houston Chronicle

Border remains a crisis, CBP officials say

- By Robert Moore and Abigail Hauslohner

EL PASO — Unauthoriz­ed migration across the U.S.-Mexico border has dropped significan­tly since a record influx of 140,000 people in May, but the border remains “in crisis” and Congress needs to act to address it, Trump administra­tion officials said here Tuesday.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents took 970,000 people into custody along the southern border in the past year — more than double the previous year’s total — including a “recordbrea­king” number of families, CBP’s acting commission­er Mark Morgan said. Border crossings in fiscal 2019 hit their highest number in more than a decade, despite a continuous drop in border crossings during the past four months, Morgan said.

Morgan, who spoke at a news conference in front of the steel-and-concrete border barrier that separates this Texas border city from Ciudad Juarez in Mexico, railed against Congress for sitting “idly by” while immigratio­n authoritie­s grappled with historic influxes of migrants. Morgan said Congress instead should pass legislatio­n that the Trump administra­tion believes will deter future migration.

Authoritie­s credit the significan­t drop in border crossings in recent months to the administra­tion’s initiative­s to close what Morgan called “loopholes” in the immigratio­n system — exceptions within U.S. law that officials say draw people to the country. Morgan also said new partnershi­ps with Mexico and Central American government­s have made a difference because those countries have strengthen­ed border security and slowed the northbound migration flow.

“This administra­tion’s strategies brought dramatic results,” Morgan said. “We’re closing the loopholes that are driving these individual­s to turn their lives over to the cartels. … We have essentiall­y ended catch and release along the southwest border,” he said, referring to the U.S. Border Patrol’s typical practice of releasing asylum-seeking families that have children and pose no security threat while they await court hearings.

The nearly 1 million people taken into custody along the southwest border included 851,000 apprehende­d between official entry points and 126,000 deemed inadmissib­le when they presented themselves at border crossings, according to CBP statistics released earlier this month.

The Trump administra­tion has sought to dramatical­ly curb migration through measures aimed at restrictin­g the routes through which migrants and asylum seekers can remain in the United States. Administra­tion officials have claimed that migrant families exploit existing protection­s for children to take advantage of U.S. asylum opportunit­ies.

Earlier this year, the administra­tion launched the experiment­al Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP), a policy also known as “Remain in Mexico,” that has forced thousands of migrants back across the border into Mexican cities while their cases are adjudicate­d in U.S. immigratio­n courts.

“The message that is going out now is that if you grab a kid, it is not an automatic passport to the United States,” Morgan said. He urged Congress to make it more difficult for migrants to claim asylum, eliminate certain legal protection­s for migrant children so that it would be easier to detain them and their families for longer, and “support ICE,” the immigratio­n enforcemen­t agency responsibl­e for deportatio­ns.

Rep. Bennie Thompson, DMiss., chairman of the House Committee on Homeland Security,

said he does not understand why the administra­tion “keeps patting themselves on the back for putting more and more people in harm’s way.”

“Congress has no intention of rubber-stamping the administra­tion’s terrible immigratio­n policies that would dramatical­ly expand family detention, indefinite­ly lock up children and send migrants into dangerous conditions,” Thompson said. “We will, however, continue the work we have been doing to improve the conditions at the border for families and children in our care.”

Border crossings declined sharply over the summer, as Mexico agreed to step up its interdicti­on efforts and the United States expanded the Remain in Mexico policy.

In September, the last month of the government’s fiscal year, the number of border crossers taken into custody dropped to about 52,000. Even with the decline, it was the highest number of migrants taken into custody during any September since 2007, according to CBP statistics.

Most asylum seekers have come from the Central American countries of Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador. But as the apprehensi­ons of Central American families have decreased in recent months, officials have noticed an uptick in the number of Mexican families seeking asylum. The increase has surfaced from CBP officials speaking privately, but Morgan did not mention the trend in his remarks Tuesday.

In August, Mexico became the largest single source of border crossers.

The administra­tion implemente­d a rule in July that requires migrants to seek asylum in the first country they pass through on their way to the U.S. border, and the U.S. Supreme Court has allowed the policy to remain in place during court challenges. The rule makes it nearly impossible for non-Mexicans to pass the initial asylum screening at the border.

The administra­tion earlier this month also launched a pilot project in El Paso to accelerate the asylum review process for Central Americans. The program, which seeks to both remove migrants rapidly from the United States and deter others from coming, aims to provide asylum seekers with a decision on their case within 10 days of their request, rather than adding new cases to the million-long immigratio­n court backlog.

Asylum cases typically take months or years to adjudicate, in part because of the challenges of gathering paperwork and other evidence to meet the burden of proof the courts require. Civil rights groups have decried the accelerate­d timeline as a denial of due process.

CBP Deputy Commission­er Robert Perez said “several dozen” people have gone through the pilot program thus far.

 ?? Cedar Attanasio / Associated Press ?? Customs and Border Protection Acting Commission­er Mark Morgan greets members of his staff ahead of a news conference near the U.S.-Mexico border on Tuesday in El Paso.
Cedar Attanasio / Associated Press Customs and Border Protection Acting Commission­er Mark Morgan greets members of his staff ahead of a news conference near the U.S.-Mexico border on Tuesday in El Paso.

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