“One mother and her small child were kidnapped less than one hour after the US government forcibly returned them to Matamoros,” Thorn Vela told lawmakers. “They were tortured for 8 days.”
Acting Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Mark Morgan has defended the policy despite the dangerous conditions.
“We are continuing to work with the government of Mexico. We provided them millions and millions of dollars to help with their humanitarian push that’s there,” Morgan told reporters earlier this month.
The administration offers a follow-up interview for migrants who say they’re afraid of returning to Mexico, but only a small share have met the standard, according to CBP data obtained by CNN.
Still, the insecurity and at times, unsanitary conditions, have led some migrant families to send their children across the US-Mexico border alone. The US Department of Health and Human Services told CNN late last month that it had identified approximately 135 children in their custody who previously arrived at the southern border with their family but are now in the US alone.
“The people that left did put some thought into why they’re leaving Central America, they have the ability to determine what the situation is they’re in,” said Kelly Overton, founder of Border Kindness, which helps transport migrants in Mexico to their court dates in the US. “In the end, can they get somewhere here where they can feed their kids and their kids are safe while they wait?”
‘You literally just can’t wait it out’
Border Kindness has made more than 2,500 trips transporting more than 1,100 people from Mexicali to Tijuana for their immigration court in San Diego. Migrants report to US officials at the border on the day of their hearing, where they are transported to a courtroom.
But cases aren’t resolved in one hearing. There are follow-up hearings to argue the merits of the case and the time it takes between hearings can wear down on migrants. By the second or third trip back to Tijuana, more and more people stop showing up, deciding to either return to their home country or move to another part of Mexico, Overton said.
“You literally just can’t wait it out,” Overton added. “You don’t see an end in sight.”
Immigration lawyers have warned that in some cases, documents provided to migrants sometimes contain incorrect hearing locations and addresses and incorrect court dates.
The Justice Department told CNN that “immigration courts nationwide may receive defective filings for a variety of reasons,” and directed questions regarding filings to the Department of Homeland Security, which has not responded to a request for comment.
Attorneys have also faced their own set of hurdles when trying to communicate with clients that aren’t located in the US. Sepulveda noted the difficulty in communicating with the young woman she represented who didn’t have a phone of her own.
Lawyers who have crossed over to Mexico to help clients have had to take into consideration their own safety. Laura Peña, pro bono counsel for the American Bar Association Commission on Immigration, recalled during a House hearing in November taking precautions when traveling to Mexico to visit clients, including crossing only during the day and coordinating with humanitarian groups or other colleagues in the area.
If not for the policy, her clients would likely be in the US where they’d receive counsel in an attorney’s office or other private location.
Not all migrants have an attorney, however — often times, putting them at a disadvantage. Research has underscored the significance of access to counsel for immigrants. Research has shown that immigrants with lawyers are more likely to be allowed into the US.
Concerns over transparency in the immigration process
In expanding the so-called “remain in Mexico” policy earlier this year, the Trump administration built tents in Laredo and Brownsville, Texas, to serve as makeshift courts for migrants waiting in Mexico until their court date. The judges in these cases preside by teleconference from other immigration courts several miles away.
US officials told CNN in June the temporary courts would allow migrants to have their hearings near or at the port, rather than being bussed miles away.
But advocates, immigration lawyers, and former immigration judges have raised alarm over the use of the tent facilities, arguing that it shrouds the court proceeding in secrecy, since the public isn’t allowed in.
Those concerns were exacerbated when the administration said it would begin using one of its adjudication centers to hear cases. Up until now, legal observers have been able to watch proceedings happening at the tent facilities from the court where the judge is based. But adjudication centers, which serve as a hub for immigration judges to beam into cases remotely, are not open to the public.
More than a dozen former immigration judges recently sent a letter to Executive Office for Immigration Review Director James McHenry underscoring in part the importance of public access to immigration courts, calling it “vital to the constitutional protections of the respondents who appear in court.”