Los Angeles Times

A legal lift for migrants who fear return

- By Kristina Davis Davis writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — A federal judge ruled in a pair of decisions Tuesday that asylum seekers who have expressed fear about being returned to Mexico to await their U.S. immigratio­n proceeding­s must be allowed access to attorneys to argue their cases.

The rulings center on a crucial interview process that determines whether such asylum seekers should be part of the Trump administra­tion’s Remain in Mexico program, or whether the likelihood of persecutio­n or torture south of the border means they should remain in the U.S. for the duration of their immigratio­n cases.

A Guatemalan family who filed the lawsuit said they were not allowed adequate access to attorneys before or during the interview with the asylum officer — a process called a “nonrefoule­ment interview.”

The family — a couple and their five children — had been assaulted at gunpoint during their trek through Mexico.

In November, U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw ordered border authoritie­s to grant the family access to attorneys.

The family has since been allowed to stay temporaril­y in the U.S.

On Tuesday, Sabraw approved class certificat­ion, widening the lawsuit to include all individual­s who are detained in U.S. Customs and Border Protection custody in California, who are awaiting or undergoing non-refoulemen­t interviews under Remain in Mexico and who have retained lawyers.

In a separate ruling, Sabraw also granted a preliminar­y injunction that requires the government to allow all class members access to legal representa­tion before and during such interviews.

“Given the stakes of a non-refoulemen­t interview — the return to a country in which one may face persecutio­n and torture — and the interview’s fact-intensive nature, it is undeniable that access to counsel is important,” Sabraw wrote.

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