USA TODAY US Edition

Asylum seekers to be denied bond hearings

Migrants could be jailed indefinite­ly under Trump administra­tion order

- Kristine Phillips Contributi­ng: Alan Gomez, Aaron Montes and Rick Jervis.

WASHINGTON – Migrants who say they face persecutio­n or torture if they return to their countries could be jailed indefinite­ly in the USA under the Trump administra­tion’s latest effort to stem the surge of asylum seekers arriving at the border.

Attorney General William Barr, who oversees immigratio­n courts, directed judges Tuesday to deny bond hearings for asylum seekers, which would keep migrants in detention while they wait for months, even years, for their claims to be heard. The decision, a departure from a years-long practice of allowing asylum seekers who show credible fear of persecutio­n to seek bail, will be challenged in court.

Barr delayed the effective date of his ruling by 90 days, acknowledg­ing it will have “an immediate and significan­t impact” on overcrowde­d detention centers. The Department of Homeland Security requested the delay, so the agency “may conduct necessary operationa­l planning,” Barr wrote in a footnote to his 11-page ruling.

Civil rights organizati­ons vowed to sue, saying the decision would result in unlawful and unnecessar­y detention of thousands of asylum seekers.

“Barr’s decision is the latest in the Trump administra­tion’s ongoing attack on individual­s fleeing persecutio­n and torture in their countries of origin,” Trina Realmuto, attorney for the American Immigratio­n Council, said in a statement. “Rather than comply with a recent district court order requiring prompt and fair bond hearings for asylum seekers before an immigratio­n judge, the administra­tion has elected instead to lock them up indefinite­ly.”

Realmuto referred to a decision by U.S. District Judge Marsha Pechman in Seattle, who ordered immigratio­n courts to hold bond hearings for asylum seekers within seven days of a request.

Federal courts have blocked many of the Trump administra­tion’s hard-line immigratio­n policies.

In San Francisco, U.S. District Judge Richard Seeborg blocked the policy of requiring Central American asylum seekers to wait in Mexico while their cases were decided in the USA. A federal appeals judge temporaril­y stopped that ruling from taking effect, keeping the administra­tion’s policy in place.

In Washington, U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan ruled that the administra­tion oversteppe­d its authority when it barred migrants from qualifying for asylum based on fears of domestic abuse or gang violence.

President Donald Trump has railed against the surge of migrants.

“You have people coming up. You know they’re all met by the lawyers ... and they say, ‘Say the following phrase: ‘I am very afraid for my life. I am afraid for my life.’ ... It’s a big fat con job, folks. It’s a big fat con job,” Trump said at a rally in Grand Rapids, Michigan, in March.

The president promised to end “catch and release,” a policy that requires the government to release migrant families and children from Central America into the USA while they wait for the outcome of their immigratio­n or asylum cases. Acting DHS Secretary Kevin McAleenan said at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing that the policy encouraged more migrants to come.

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