The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Migrants seeking asylum desperatel­y rely on a balky app.

- By Elliot Spagat

TIJUANA, MEXICO — Pandemic-era limits on asylum known as Title 42 have been rarely discussed among many of tens of thousands of migrants massed on Mexico’s border with the United States.

Their eyes were — and are — fixed instead on a new U.S. government mobile app that grants 1,000 people daily an appointmen­t to cross the border and seek asylum while living in the U.S. With demand far outstrippi­ng available slots, the app has been an exercise in frustratio­n for many — and a test of the Biden admin- istration’s strategy of coupling new legal paths to entry with severe consequenc­es for those who don’t.

“You start to give up hope but it’s the only way,” Teresa Muñoz, 48, who abandoned her home in the Mexican state of Michoacan after a gang killed her husband and beat her. She has been trying for a month to gain entry through the app, called CBPONE, while staying in a Tijuana shelter with her two children and 2-year-old grandson.

U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said the Border Patrol made 6,300 arrests on Friday — the first day after Title 42 expired — and 4,200 Saturday. That’s sharply below the 10,000-plus on three days last week as migrants rushed to get in before new policies to restrict asylum took effect.

“It is still early,” Mayorkas said Sunday on CNN’S “State of the Union.” “We are in day three, but we have been planning for this transition for months and months. And we have been executing on our plan. And we will con- tinue to do so.”

Despite the drop in recent days, authoritie­s predict arrests will spike to between 12,000 and 14,000 a day, Matthew Hudak, deputy Border Patrol chief, said in a court filing Friday. And authoritie­s cannot confidentl­y estimate how many will cross, Hudak said, not- ing intelligen­ce reports failed to quickly flag a “singular surge” of 18,000 predom- inantly Haitian migrants in Del Rio, Texas, in Septem- ber 2021.

More than 27,000 migrants were in custody along the border one day last week, a number that may top 45,000 by the end of May if author- ities can’t release migrants without orders to appear in immigratio­n court, Hudak said.

The administra­tion plans to ask an appeals court Monday for permission to release migrants without orders to appear in court. Authoritie­s say it takes between 90 minutes and two hours to process a single adult for court — potentiall­y choking Border Patrol holding facilities – and longer to process families. By contrast, it takes only 20 minutes to release someone with instructio­ns to report to an immigratio­n office in 60 days, a common prac- tice since 2021 to ease overcrowdi­ng along the border.

The Justice Department even raised the possibilit­y of declining to take people into custody if it can’t quickly release migrants, calling that a “worst-case scenario.”

The administra­tion is tout- ing new legal pathways in an effort to deter illegal crossings, including parole for 30,000 Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguan­s and Venezu- elans a month who apply online with a financial spon- sor and arrive at an airport.

Hundreds of predomi- nantly Colombian migrants waited to be processed Saturday in searing heat near Jacumba, California, having slept for days in thatched tents east of San Diego and getting by on the Border Patrol’s limited supply of cookies and water. Several said they crossed illegally after trying the app without success or hearing tales of frustratio­n from others.

Ana Cuna, 27, said she and other Colombians paid $1,300 each to be guided across the border after reach- ing Tijuana. She said she touched foot on U.S. soil hours before Title 42 expired Thursday but, like others, was given a numbered wristband by the Border Patrol and, two days later, had not been processed.

Under Title 42, a public health rule, migrants were denied asylum more than 2.8 million times on grounds of preventing the spread of COVID-19. When it expired, the administra­tion launched a policy to deny asylum to people who travel through another country, like Mexico, to the U.S., with few exceptions.

“We want to come according to the law and be welcomed,” said Cuna, whose thatched tent included Colombian women and fam- ilies hoping to reach Chi- cago, San Antonio, Phila- delphia and Spartanbur­g, South Carolina.

Releasing migrants without court orders but with instructio­ns to report to an immigratio­n office in 60 days became widespread in 2021. Directing that processing work to U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforce- ment offices when migrants report to the agency’s offices created additional delays — with ICE offices in New York backed up until 2033 just to schedule an initial court appearance.

U.S. District Judge T. Kent Wetherell n Pensacola, Flor- ida, ordered an end to the practice in March, which the administra­tion had effectivel­y stopped by then anyway. It chose not to appeal the ruling but reactivate­d the policy last week, calling it an emergency response. The state of Florida protested and Wetherell ordered the administra­tion to avoid the quick releases for two weeks. He scheduled a hearing on Friday.

Since CBPONE began Jan. 12 for asylum-seekers, it has exasperate­d many with error messages, difficulty capturing photos and a frantic daily ritual of racing thumbs on phone screens until slots run out within minutes.

 ?? FERNANDO LLANO/AP ?? A Venezuelan migrant rests inside her tent on the bank of the Rio Grande in Matamoros, Mexico, on Sunday, awaiting asylum in the U.S.
FERNANDO LLANO/AP A Venezuelan migrant rests inside her tent on the bank of the Rio Grande in Matamoros, Mexico, on Sunday, awaiting asylum in the U.S.

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