The Denver Post

Justices will weigh policy for migrants to remain in Mexico

- By Elliot Spagat The Associated Press

TIJUANA, MEXICO » When a woman gashed her leg in mountains inhabited by snakes and scorpions, she told Joel Úbeda to take her 5-year-old daughter. Úbeda refused to let the mother die, despite the advice of their smuggler and another migrant in a group of seven, and helped carry her to safety by shining a mirror in sunlight to flag a U.S. Customs and Border Protection helicopter near San Diego.

The motorcycle mechanic, who used his house in Nicaragua as collateral for a $6,500 smuggling fee, says the worst day of his life was yet to come.

Arrested after the encounter with U.S. agents, Úbeda learned two days later that he could not pursue asylum in the United States while living with a cousin in Miami. Instead, he would have to wait in the Mexican border city of Tijuana for hearings in U.S. immigratio­n court under a Trumpera policy that will be argued Tuesday before the U.S. Supreme Court.

President Joe Biden halted the “Remain in Mexico” policy his first day in office. A judge forced him to reinstate it in December, but barely 3,000 migrants were enrolled by the end of March, making little impact during a period when authoritie­s stopped migrants about 700,000 times at the border.

Úbeda, like many migrants at a Tijuana shelter, had never heard of the policy, officially called “Migrant Protection Protocols.” It was widely known under President Donald Trump, who enrolled about 70,000 migrants after launching it in 2019 and making it a centerpiec­e of efforts to deter asylumseek­ers.

“It’s a frightenin­g experience,” Úbeda said after a telephone call with his mother to consider whether to return to Nicaragua to reunite with her, his wife and his daughter. He was perplexed that a vast majority of Nicaraguan­s are released in the U.S. to pursue asylum, including the woman he saved and her daughter.

Nearly 2,200 asylumseek­ers, or 73% of those enrolled through March, are from Nicaragua, with nearly all the rest from Colombia, Cuba, Ecuador and Venezuela. Yet even among Nicaraguan­s, the policy is small in scope. U.S. authoritie­s stopped Nicaraguan­s more than 56,000 times from December to March.

Criticisms of the policy are the same under Biden and Trump: Migrants are terrified in dangerous Mexican border cities and it is difficult to find lawyers from Mexico.

U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, in an October order to end “Remain in Mexico,” reluctantl­y conceded that the policy caused a drop in weak asylum claims under Trump but said it did not justify the harms.

Emil Cardenas, 27, said he bloodied his foot and drank his urine after running out of water on a three-day hike in mountains near San Diego with a smuggler who took a $10,000 installmen­t toward his fee and stole his passport, phone and other identifica­tion.

Cardenas hoped to live near his brother, a Catholic priest in New Jersey, while seeking asylum but waits at the Tijuana shelter for his first hearing in San Diego on May 18. He is dishearten­ed to see others at the shelter on their third or fourth hearing.

“One has to find a way to get across,” said Cardenas, a Colombian who had attempted twice to enter the U.S. “I’m thinking about what to do.”

While waiting for hearings, men at the shelter are attached to smartphone­s — reading, watching videos and occasional­ly calling friends and family. A large television facing rows of tables and plastic chairs helps defeat boredom.

Many have been robbed and assaulted in Mexico, making them too scared to leave the shelter. Some chat in small groups but most keep to themselves, lost in thought.

Carlos Humberto Castellano, who repaired cellphones in Colombia and wants to join family in New York, cried for two days after being returned to Tijuana to wait for a court date in San Diego. It cost him about $6,500 to fly to Mexico and pay a smuggler to cross the border, leaving him in debt, he said.

“I can’t leave (the shelter) because I don’t know what could happen,” said Castellano, 23, recalling that his smuggler took a photo of him. “Getting kidnapped is the fear.”

The issue before the Supreme Court is whether the policy is discretion­ary and can be ended, as the Biden administra­tion argues, or is the only way to comply with what Texas and Missouri say is a congressio­nal command not to release the migrants in the United States.

Without adequate detention facilities, the states argue the administra­tion’s only option is to make migrants wait in Mexico for asylum hearings in the U.S.

The two sides also disagree about whether the way the administra­tion ended the policy complies with a federal law that compels agencies to follow certain rules and explain their actions.

A ruling is expected shortly after the administra­tion ends another key Trumpera border policy, lifting pandemic-related authority to expel migrants without a chance to seek asylum on May 23. The decision to end Title 42 authority, named for a 1944 public health law, is being legally challenged by 22 states and faces growing division within Biden’s Democratic Party.

Due to costs, logistics and strained diplomatic relations, Title 42 has been difficult to apply to some nationalit­ies, including Nicaraguan­s, which explains why the administra­tion has favored them for “Remain in Mexico.”

The administra­tion made some changes at Mexico’s behest. It pledged to try to resolve cases within six months and agreed to shoulder costs of shuttling migrants to and from the border in Mexico for hearings.

Finding a lawyer is a tall order. U.S. authoritie­s give migrants a list of low- or nocost attorneys but phone lines are overwhelme­d.

Judges warn migrants that immigratio­n law is complicate­d and that they face longer odds without an attorney. Migrants respond that calls to attorneys go unanswered and they can’t afford typical fees.

“I’ve seen lots of people in your situation who have found attorneys, often for free,” Judge Scott Simpson told a migrant this month in a San Diego courtroom before granting more time to hire one.

 ?? Gregory Bull, The Associated Press ?? Emil Cardenas, of Colombia, waits at a shelter for migrants Thursday in Tijuana, Mexico. Cardenas, who was detained and sent back to Mexico, hoped to live near his brother in New Jersey while seeking asylum but waits at the Tijuana shelter for his first hearing in San Diego on May 18.
Gregory Bull, The Associated Press Emil Cardenas, of Colombia, waits at a shelter for migrants Thursday in Tijuana, Mexico. Cardenas, who was detained and sent back to Mexico, hoped to live near his brother in New Jersey while seeking asylum but waits at the Tijuana shelter for his first hearing in San Diego on May 18.

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