Texarkana Gazette

How Biden officials aim to use a mobile app to cut illegal U.S. entries

- NICK MIROFF

When U.S. Customs and Border Protection introduced the CBP One mobile applicatio­n two years ago, it was largely geared toward commercial trucking companies trying to schedule cargo inspection­s. Border officials hoped to build on the success of programs such as Global Entry and TSA Precheck that collect informatio­n in advance while offering travelers speedier passage, allowing them to avoid some of the onerous security checks implemente­d after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

Now the CBP One app is taking on a central role in the Biden administra­tion’s plan to overhaul asylum screening at the border and slash illegal crossings. The number of migrants intercepte­d along the U.S. southern border reached record levels during the president’s first two years in office, and with immigratio­n likely to remain a galvanizin­g issue in the 2024 election, Biden officials are under pressure to address a major political vulnerabil­ity.

New technology is key to their strategy. Authoritie­s are already using CBP One to process migrants asking for an exemption to pandemic-era border restrictio­ns, and to coordinate travel for up to 30,000 migrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela who the administra­tion is allowing to legally enter the United States each month through a program known as “parole.”

The app will soon take on an even bigger role, as the Biden administra­tion aims to use CBP One as a gateway to the U.S. asylum system. Homeland Security and Justice Department officials are preparing to announce a new rule this month that will penalize asylum seekers who cross into the United States illegally or fail to apply for protection in countries they transit en route to the U.S. southern border. The measure will instruct asylum seekers to use CBP One to request an appointmen­t at an official U.S. port of entry, which officials say will facilitate a more orderly process while minimizing disruption­s to regular trade and travel.

The Biden administra­tion’s expanding use of the app has triggered criticism across the political spectrum. Immigrant advocates say CBP One disadvanta­ges vulnerable migrants, while hard-liners claim it’s facilitati­ng Biden policies they denounce as “open borders.”

Luis Miranda, a spokespers­on for the Department of Homeland Security, called the CBP One app “a transparen­t and publicly accessible way to schedule appointmen­ts for migrants.”

“This app cuts out the smugglers, decreasing migrant exploitati­on, and improving safety and security in addition to making the process more efficient,” Miranda said. “This is part of the administra­tion’s goals to create legal, safe and humane processes while imposing consequenc­es on those who do not use available processes.”

Attorneys and migrant advocates working at shelters in northern Mexico say CBP One is prone to crash or kick users off right at the moment they attempt to upload their data. The app has more than 500,000 downloads from the Google Play store, but a rating of 2.4 stars - lower than other CBP apps available on the site. Its reviews on the App Store are no better.

Of greater concern to immigrant advocates are claims the app’s facial-capture feature is prone to malfunctio­n for users with darker complexion­s. They say family groups face obstacles because available slots are so scarce. And advocates say destitute asylum seekers who may be in grave danger don’t necessaril­y have smartphone­s with reliable internet access.

The app is “fine as a tool in the toolbox, but it cannot be the only access point to asylum,” said Chelsea Sachau, an attorney with the Arizona-based Florence Project, which provides legal aid to migrants and asylum seekers. “Asylum seekers have due process rights, and reliance on this app alone will never be sufficient.”

Sachau, who works with clients in the Mexican border city of Nogales, said her team has seen the app’s facial capture software reject identical twins - apparently assuming them to be the same person - and babies who don’t sit still.

“The biggest headache is that there are too few spots, so people are trying every morning to enter the app,” Sachau said. “It’s like trying to get tickets for a Taylor Swift concert, only it’s not a concert, and you’re trying to save your family’s life.”

During the Trump administra­tion, immigrant advocates criticized a different CBP queue-management practice known as “metering,” in which the agency limited the number of people allowed each day to approach U.S. ports of entry to request asylum. Informal, handwritte­n waiting lists for those slots grew to thousands of names. Mexican authoritie­s managed the queue in some border cities; reports of abuse and corruption were rife. CBP One solves that problem, said Seth Stodder, who worked as a DHS official during the Obama and George W. Bush administra­tions. “This is a different way of forming a queue that is more efficient and less amenable to crime,” he said. “It’s different from the metering system where criminal organizati­ons buy and sell spots in line. It’s like getting a reservatio­n at a restaurant, and they text you when your table is ready.”

That type of casual efficiency has chafed groups who want tighter border controls. They say the administra­tion is using the app to speed up the entry of migrants who don’t qualify for admission under U.S. immigratio­n laws.

“Instead of an Opentable app, this is an open border app,” said Mark Krikorian, the executive director of the D.c.-based Center for Immigratio­n Studies, referring to the popular online restaurant reservatio­n tool. Krikorian, whose group seeks to curb all immigratio­n to the United States, said he visited a migrant shelter in northern Mexico recently where he saw migrants struggling to use CBP One.

“But that’s not the problem,” he said. “The problem is unauthoriz­ed people are being let into the United States beyond the limits that were set by Congress. Whether that is done in an orderly way or a disorderly way is not important. None of these people are supposed to be allowed into the United States, and the administra­tion is flouting the law.”

Biden officials say their expansion of legal migration options, especially the 30,000 monthly “parole” slots announced in Jan. 5, has unlocked Mexico’s willingnes­s to help crack down on unlawful crossings.

In the weeks since the parole program was announced, illegal crossings from Mexico by migrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela plunged 97 percent, Biden said during his State of the Union address. Biden officials point to those numbers as evidence their carrot-andstick approach is working, and they say they are acting swiftly to fix technical issues with CBP One.

They reject claims the app’s facial capture feature is skewed against applicants with darker complexion­s. Last week 40 percent of the applicants who used CBP One to obtain an exemption from public health restrictio­ns at the border were Haitian, according to DHS, an indication that no particular group has been discrimina­ted against, officials said.

 ?? (Alejandro Tamayo/the San Diego Union-tribune) ?? An official assists a migrant with the use of the CBP One app on Jan. 12 at Palacio Municipal in Tijuana, Baja California.
(Alejandro Tamayo/the San Diego Union-tribune) An official assists a migrant with the use of the CBP One app on Jan. 12 at Palacio Municipal in Tijuana, Baja California.

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