Austin American-Statesman

Why asylum-seekers cross the border illegally

Doing what friends say works, even if it means smugglers.

- By David Yaffe-Bellany Texas Tribune

People seeking asylum in the United States say they cross the border illegally because they don’t think they have other options.

— After a cop took Claudia to a field, grabbed her by the throat and threatened to kill her and her 7-year-old son Kevin this spring, it didn’t take long for the 26-yearold single mother to decide it was time to get out of El Salvador.

What happened next illustrate­s why so few Central American migrants enter the country the “right way” — at the internatio­nal bridges, or ports of entry, where migrants can request asylum without crossing the border illegally.

Claudia said she quickly called a friend who knew a smuggler.

“She told me that’s what he did, that he was good — that he was responsibl­e,’’ she said. The man told her he could do it for $5,000. But she would have to do it his way.

“He said, ‘I do it but only with one method.’ They only will take you across the river in a raft, and on the other side you walk,” she recalled. “I asked him, ‘Why don’t you do it (at the bridge)?’ and he said they don’t do it there because sometimes they get sent back.”

Every month, thousands of asylum-seeking families cross the Rio Grande and turn themselves in to Border Patrol rather than line up at a port of entry. Since October, more than 40,000 family members traveling together have presented themselves at the ports of entry without proper documentat­ion; nearly twice that many have crossed into the country illegally over the same time period. (Neither U.S. Customs and Border Protection nor U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services could say how many of the migrants who arrived at ports of entry requested asylum.)

The Trump administra­tion sought to curb illegal crossings by imposing a “zero tolerance” crackdown at the border this summer that left more than 2,500 children, including Claudia’s son, separated from their parents.

“If you are seeking asylum for your family, there is no reason to break the law and illegally cross between ports of entry,” Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen declared on Twitter at the height of the family separation crisis in June.

But that message ignored the deep-rooted factors — from smuggling practices to the complexiti­es of U.S. immigratio­n law — that drive Central American asylum seekers to the river, despite the risks of a clandestin­e crossing.

Asylum-seekers like Claudia start on the path to an illegal crossing long before they actually reach the banks of the Rio Grande, relying on guidance from an informal network of well-meaning friends and often unscrupulo­us smugglers. For years, asylum seekers have taken that path almost by default, making it unrealisti­c to expect them to abruptly change approach in response to shifting political currents in the United States, according to interviews with migrants, immigratio­n experts and U.S. law enforcemen­t.

For all the Trump administra­tion’s rhetoric, migrants almost never base their border-crossing strategy on policy pronouncem­ents from Washington, said Stephanie Leutert, who runs the Mexico Security Initiative at the University of Texas at Austin.

“In terms of how you do it and what’s the right way — they’re getting that informatio­n from their neighbors and from their friends,” Leutert said. “And two, it’s smugglers selling packages. It’s been successful for their friends, so they’re going to sign up for that same package.”

The smugglers “operate everything on the south side” of the border, said Robert Rodriguez, a Border Patrol agent in McAllen.

“If (migrants) start turning themselves in at the ports of entry,” he said, “they don’t make money.”

Many immigrants who pay smugglers to help them cross the Rio Grande do not know that the bridges are even an option for asylum-seekers. Over the past three weeks, The Texas Tribune interviewe­d more than a dozen Central American migrants who crossed the river and turned themselves in to Border Patrol. Only two said they had heard immigrants could request asylum at the bridges.

Earlier this month, Honduran Javier Piñeda, sitting in the McAllen bus station with his 4-year-old daughter, Daisy Daniela, explained why he crossed the river instead of the bridge. He said his brother in North Carolina arranged and financed his journey from Honduras, including the illegal crossing. He just followed instructio­ns.

“Family members who had come before told me how it was, and so I took their advice and then I came,” Piñeda said. Asked whether anyone had mentioned a bridge, he said, “No, because I’m not familiar with it.”

Guatemalan migrant Roberto Bernabe, who crossed the river with his 3-year-old daughter and was released with an ankle monitor in early August, also said he didn’t know he could request asylum at one of the bridges. “We arrived at the river and we know a friend there, and that’s how we crossed,” he said.

It’s a more dangerous route for asylum seekers, who sometimes walk for hours through the brushlands along the border, where heat-related incidents are the leading cause of death among migrants.

In late July, Yadira Veliz, 21, swam across the river with a group of asylum seekers and turned herself in to Border Patrol. She was eight months pregnant.

“I was just asking God for help,” said Veliz, who was fleeing Honduras. “I just wanted to cross.”

But while theoretica­lly safer, crossing the bridge carries its own risks. Despite the government’s assurances, over the years there have been sporadic reports of U.S. officials separating migrant parents from their children at ports of entry. Other asylum seekers say they have been turned away by armed Customs and Border Protection officials stationed on the bridges who claim the ports of entry are over capacity.

“I think it’s visually so intimidati­ng,” said Guadalupe Correa-Cabrera, a political scientist at George Mason University and the author of a book about organized crime in Mexico. “They don’t believe they can enter through there. However, they know they can do it with a smuggler.”

Honduran José Aguilar, 35, crossed the internatio­nal bridge between Brownsvill­e and Matamoros with his two children in early August. But unlike most Central American immigrants, Aguilar had a visa allowing him to travel freely through Mexico, without help from a smuggler. In the Mexican city of San Fernando, Tamaulipas, about an hour and a half from the border, Aguilar got assistance from an evangelica­l group, which recommende­d that he bring his family to a port of entry.

“I know that crossing the bridge, doing things legally, is a point in my favor,” he said. “And if I cross the river and the Americans catch me, that’s a point in their favor because then I would be invading their territory.”

Over the years, however, crossing the Rio Grande has had certain procedural advantages. Immigrants who enter the country illegally are generally eligible to be released on bond, while those who present themselves at the bridges stay in detention unless Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t officers decide to release them on “parole.”

“It’s actually better for you in a number of ways to cross the river,” said Jeremy Slack, an immigratio­n expert at the University of Texas-El Paso. “The likelihood you’ll be released on bond is greater. Instead of having to pursue your asylum claim entirely in detention centers, you can do so from the place that you’re intending to live.”

Federal courts have taken notice of this legal quirk, which successive administra­tions in Washington have glossed over while urging migrants not to cross the border illegally. Immigrants who arrive at a port of entry are left in a sort of statutory limbo — deemed legally “inadmissib­le’’ — whereas those who cross the river without permission have due process rights that allow them to appear in front of a judge.

“Ironically, this dichotomy conferred greater legal protection upon aliens who entered the U.S. illegally and secretly than those who attempted to seek refuge by presenting themselves unsuccessf­ully to the officials at ports of entry,” the Yale Law & Policy Review wrote in 2000, discussing a 1984 appellate court decision in an asylum case. “Because aliens who illegally crossed the border in the dead of night achieved a ‘deportable’ status while aliens detained when attempting to enter lawfully were deemed ‘excludable­s,’ the law rewarded those illegal and undocument­ed aliens who successful­ly avoided our laws by evading intercepti­on.”

The rules for border crossers changed abruptly this spring, though, when the Trump administra­tion implemente­d its controvers­ial plan to criminally charge every migrant who crossed between the ports of entry, including asylum-seeking parents. At the end of June, Trump rolled back the policy after it provoked a bipartisan firestorm, setting the stage for hundreds of family reunificat­ions over the last month and a half. (More than 500 families remain separated.)

Claudia and Kevin were reunited on July 23 after about two months apart. Now, they’re settled in northern Virginia, as Claudia’s asylum case works its way through the immigratio­n system. In her asylum paperwork, Claudia says she was threatened by a cop who was in cahoots with a gang member she had filed a complaint against.

Despite the trauma of the past few months, Claudia said she doesn’t think crossing at a port of entry would have guaranteed a better outcome for her and Kevin. While she was in detention, she said, she met a Brazilian woman who crossed a bridge and was still separated from her child.

And she pointed out that there are also risks to waiting on the Mexican side of the border, where smugglers control the flow of migrants and stories of kidnapping­s abound.

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 ?? JOHN MOORE / GETTY IMAGES ?? Central American asylum-seekers wait as U.S. Border Patrol agents take them into custody on June 12 near McAllen to be sent to a U.S. Customs and Border Protection processing center for possible separation.
JOHN MOORE / GETTY IMAGES Central American asylum-seekers wait as U.S. Border Patrol agents take them into custody on June 12 near McAllen to be sent to a U.S. Customs and Border Protection processing center for possible separation.

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