Los Angeles Times

Administra­tion bars access to tent courts for immigrant cases

- BY MOLLY HENNESSY-FISKE

HOUSTON — The Trump administra­tion announced Wednesday that new immigratio­n courts in tents on the Texas border with Mexico will be closed to legal observers, the press and the public.

Immigratio­n lawyers condemned the restrictio­ns as a violation of the due process rights of asylum seekers.

Federal contractor­s built the two massive tents along the Rio Grande in the cities of Brownsvill­e and Laredo this summer at a cost of $25 million.

The “port courts” were designed to host hearings for the more than 42,000 asylum seekers who were returned to Mexico while their cases proceed under the Trump administra­tion’s “Remain in Mexico” program that began in January, said Mark Morgan, acting commission­er of Customs and Border Protection.

Immigratio­n judges in San Antonio will hear those cases over a video link, according to a statement from the Department of Homeland Security. Members of the public, including reporters and legal observers, will be permitted to watch the proceeding­s over video from the San Antonio court.

Immigratio­n lawyers said they were told judges from the Texas cities of Harlingen and Port Isabel would also be hearing cases from the tent courts.

The Laredo court heard a few cases Wednesday and is expected to ramp up operations on Monday, with remote judges hearing 200 to 250 cases a day from 20 courtrooms, said Rep. Henry Cuellar, a Democrat who represents the city and organized a tour of the tent there Tuesday.

The Brownsvill­e tent can host 720 migrants a day, according to a federal contract.

Lawyers said they were still trying to get more informatio­n about the proceeding­s and accused the government of making it difficult for them to represent asylum seekers.

“Without providing the correct locations, names of the immigratio­n judges and the times of the hearings to the public, this administra­tion is effectivel­y violating its own regulation­s and blocking public access to immigratio­n court hearings,” said Laura Lynch, senior policy counsel for the American Immigratio­n Lawyers Assn.

The government acknowledg­ed that immigratio­n courts are typically open to the public, which has had access to courtrooms in detention centers overseen by judges who appear via video.

But Homeland Security said the new facilities are “unique from other immigratio­n courts.”

 ?? Molly Hennessy-Fiske Los Angeles Times ?? LAWYERS condemned the restrictio­ns on tent courts in Texas as a violation of due process rights.
Molly Hennessy-Fiske Los Angeles Times LAWYERS condemned the restrictio­ns on tent courts in Texas as a violation of due process rights.

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