Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Captured border aliens cite permits rumor

- ALICIA A. CALDWELL

WASHINGTON — Nearly a year after President Barack Obama’s administra­tion began a public relations campaign to dispel rumors of a free pass for immigrant families crossing the border illegally, internal intelligen­ce files from the Homeland Security Department suggest that effort is failing.

Hundreds of immigrants caught illegally crossing the Mexican border between July and September told U.S. immigratio­n agents they made the dangerous trip in part because they believed they would be permitted to stay in the United States and collect public benefits.

The interviews with immigrants by federal agents were intended to help the Obama administra­tion understand what might be driving a puzzling surge in the number of border crossings that started over the summer.

Administra­tion efforts to stop the flow of immigrant families, primarily from Central America, have included public service campaigns in Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala to highlight the dangers and consequenc­es of making the trek.

The Associated Press obtained copies of the interview summaries, which were compiled in reports by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s Office of Intelligen­ce. They said hundreds of people traveling as part of families consistent­ly cited opportunit­ies to obtain permission to stay in the U.S., claim asylum and receive unspecifie­d benefits. Immigrants spoke of “permisos,” or passes to come into the U.S.

The report “is not intended to be a comprehens­ive analysis of the situation,” said department spokesman Marsha Catron, adding that troubles in the immigrants’ home countries likely contribute­d to their flight as well.

Although the Obama administra­tion has explained that immigrants who cross the U.S. border illegally can be deported, lengthy backlogs of more than 456,000 cases mean that immigrants effectivel­y remain in the U.S. for years before a judge decides whether they should leave the country. Also, recent court rulings have complicate­d the government’s plans to hold families in immigratio­n jails pending deportatio­n proceeding­s. Immigrants living in the U.S. illegally generally are not eligible for public benefits, except that children may receive free or reduced meals in public schools.

Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson said the rising number of border crossings by families and children was due to “push factors” in Central America, such as crime and violence. He said the Obama administra­tion wants to invest $1 billion in Central America to address the underlying problems that push families and children out of Central America.

“We need to expand on this and … we need to make the hard investment,” Johnson said Thursday at an academic conference at the Georgetown University Law Center.

Federal agents interviewe­d 345 people traveling with family members between July 7 and Sept. 30, according to the fivepage report obtained by the House Judiciary Committee. The interviews did not focus on what prompted the immigrants to leave their home countries, though many did mention gang and family violence as factors.

“This internal Border Patrol document shows that the Obama administra­tion’s lax immigratio­n policies are the culprit for the ongoing surge at our borders,” said Rep. Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., chairman of the Judiciary Committee.

Last year, the administra­tion coped with an unpreceden­ted spike in children and families. By the end of the 2014 budget year, more than 136,000 people traveling as families and unaccompan­ied children had been caught crossing the border illegally. The numbers had dipped this year, with 79,808 people caught at the border. But the figures surged again during the last three months of this budget year.

Although the administra­tion opened two new detention centers in Texas to hold thousands of immigrants, a federal judge in California ruled in August that the facilities violated a long-standing legal agreement that stipulates that immigrant children cannot be held in unlicensed secured facilities. U.S. District Judge Dolly Gee ordered the department to release the children, with their mothers when possible, “without unnecessar­y delay” and gave the department until this month to comply.

The administra­tion has appealed that ruling, though before Gee’s order was issued, Johnson had already announced plans to make it easier for families to be released on bond after being caught at the border.

Most of the immigrants interviewe­d, or 181 of them, said reports about the release of immigrant families influenced their decision to come to the U.S.

 ?? AP/ERIC GAY ?? Hundreds of families and children from Central America caught crossing into the U.S. seemed to think they could stay and receive benefits, according to files from the Homeland Security Department.
AP/ERIC GAY Hundreds of families and children from Central America caught crossing into the U.S. seemed to think they could stay and receive benefits, according to files from the Homeland Security Department.

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