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Anatomy of Biden's catch and release catastrophe

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  gregtx  •  3 years ago  •  7 comments

By:   Nolan Rappaport (MSN)

Anatomy of Biden's catch and release catastrophe
Border patrol apprehended more than 1.6 million illegal crossers in fiscal 2021, the highest number since the government began tracking in 1960.

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



At a press conference that took place before he started his presidency, Biden said he would not be able to roll back Trump's restrictive asylum policies right away. He said it would likely take six months. "The last thing we need is to say we're going to stop immediately ... and then end up with 2 million people on our border."

Nevertheless, Biden reversed other key Trump policies on Jan. 20, 2021, a few hours after taking the oath of office. For instance, he -

  • Halted construction of the border wall;
  • Ended Trump's travel ban;
  • Revoked Trump's executive order directing his administration "to employ all lawful means to enforce the immigration laws of the United States;" and
  • Biden's acting DHS secretary issued interim enforcement guidelines that limited enforcement actions to deportable aliens who pose a threat to national security, public safety, or border security.

The interim enforcement guidelines reined in ICE enforcement so severely that its 6,000 immigration enforcement officers were averaging only one arrest every two months as of the end of May 2021.

And the arrest rate hasn't changed much since then. ICE arrested and booked into detention 4,281 aliens during September 2021, which raised the average number of arrests per agent - with detention - to one every month and a half.

An illegal crosser who succeeds in reaching the interior of the country is home free. It is extremely unlikely that he will be arrested by ICE unless he is convicted of a serious crime in the United States.

This encourages illegal crossers to keep trying until they succeed.

Moreover, their safe haven in the interior of the country was reinforced by the final version of the enforcement guidelines, which reins ICE in even more by requiring a case-by-case evaluation of various positive and negative factors before deciding whether to take an enforcement action.

Flood of illegal crossers

The border patrol apprehended more than 1.3 million illegal crossers in the first eight months of the Biden administration. This brought apprehensions for fiscal 2021, up to more than 1.6 million, which is the highest number of illegal crossings recorded in any fiscal year since the government began tracking such entries in 1960.

These figures do not include migrants who successfully avoided apprehension after making an illegal entry that was detected by CBP sensors, videos cameras, or agents. The border patrol refers to such entries as "got aways." Got aways have been averaging more than 1,000 a day in recent months.

No one knows how many migrants succeed in making an illegal entry without being detected.

In the midst of a deadly pandemic

Although I don't know how they were infected, the fact that 11,920 CBP employees have tested positive for COVID-19 as of Oct. 21, 2021, indicates that COVID is a problem at the border.

DHS doesn't test illegal crossers for COVID-19 upon their arrival. COVID testing is postponed until they are released to local community groups, cities, or counties. And they usually spend days confined in tight spaces with scores of strangers.

In the Spring, about 5 percent of the single adults and families who were tested after being released tested positive for COVID-19. The rate was around 12 percent for the unaccompanied minors.

Migrants who test positive are transferred to a shelter operated by the city they are in. The rest spend a night or two at a respite center and then take planes or buses to their destinations inside the United States.

Catch and release

Florida State Attorney General Ashley Moody recently filed a lawsuit to stop the administration's catch and release policy, which she alleges has resulted in the release of at least 225,000 illegal crossers.

She alleges that this violates the mandatory detention provisions in sections 1225(b)(1) and (2) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) which require DHS to detain all arriving aliens pending a decision as to whether they have a valid basis for entering the United States.

She also alleges that the administration is violating section 1182(d)(5)(A) of the INA by granting parole to authorize the admission of undocumented migrants without complying with the requirements of that provision, which specify that parole may be used "only on a case-by-case basis" and only for "urgent humanitarian reasons or significant public benefit."

She asked the court to hold unlawful and set aside the administration's policy of releasing arriving aliens in violation of these statutory requirements.

According to the New York Post, planeloads of undocumented migrant children are being flown secretly into suburban New York. The public has no way of knowing how common this practice is.

Buses leaving McAllen, Texas, are struggling to provide transportation for illegal crossers released by overwhelmed border patrol agents. The agents process them and then send them to a government-run COVID test site. After being tested, they stay at a Catholic Charities center while arrangements are made for them to travel further into the United states.

The center accommodates about 7,000 people a week. Usually, half leave - for destinations elsewhere within the United States - by bus and the rest by airplane.

Backlog crisis

The immigration court backlog has increased every year since fiscal 2008, when it was only 186,108 cases. As of the end of fiscal 2021, there were more than 1.4 million cases in the backlog, and the average wait for a hearing was more than three years.

It is unrealistic to expect the government to keep track of where released aliens are for that many years, which could make it impossible to notify them when a hearing has been scheduled for them.

Consequently, aliens being released now probably won't get an asylum hearing unless the administration puts them ahead of immigrants who are in line for a hearing already, many of whom have already been waiting for years.

At some point, the situation at the border will get so bad that the administration won't be able to deny that it is a crisis. But by then, it could be too late to end the crisis with politically acceptable measures.

Nolan Rappaport was detailed to the House Judiciary Committee as an executive branch immigration law expert for three years. He subsequently served as an immigration counsel for the Subcommittee on Immigration, Border Security and Claims for four years. Prior to working on the Judiciary Committee, he wrote decisions for the Board of Immigration Appeals for 20 years. Follow his blog at https://nolanrappaport.blogspot.com.


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GregTx
Professor Guide
1  seeder  GregTx    3 years ago
It is unrealistic to expect the government to keep track of where released aliens are for that many years, which could make it impossible to notify them when a hearing has been scheduled for them.

in other words once they're in then, they're here to stay since ICE isn't arresting them anymore.

 
 
 
XXJefferson51
Senior Guide
1.1  XXJefferson51  replied to  GregTx @1    3 years ago

It will take our next President to track them down wherever they are and deport them.  

 
 
 
 
Greg Jones
Professor Participates
3  Greg Jones    3 years ago

Butt wait, there's more.

 
 
 
Freewill
Junior Quiet
4  Freewill    3 years ago

Greg - Border Report is a good unbiased resource for the truth about what is happening at the US-Mexico border. I have posted several reports from this organization here since March or April and the situation has continued to get worse.  Especially the Covid aspect and how the DHS is failing to test the people pouring across the border and instead putting that on overwhelmed local resources like Catholic Charities, especially in the RGV area, who have no power to detain those found to test positive.  As of two months ago 16% of those crossing into the RGV were found later to test positive for Covid.  Sources in Laredo, one of the places where immigrants pouring into the RGV are being transferred, are reporting 35 to 40% are testing positive .

THIS article supports the facts in your article and sheds some light on an even more disturbing aspect of this situation.

Fiscal 2021 totals, which were released on Friday by U.S. Customs and Border Protection, showed the RGV agents encountered 549,077 migrants — a 508% increase from Fiscal 2020. The sector also had one-third of all encounters in Fiscal 2021 on the southern border,  according to the CBP year-end figures.   “It’s the highest in decades since we’ve been keeping track,” Border Patrol Special Operations Supervisor Christian Alvarez said Wednesday.

Alvarez said crossings are dictated by criminal cartel organizations and human traffickers who decide when and where migrants cross, and how much they have to pay. Human traffickers favor bringing migrant families and unaccompanied children across the border in the Rio Grande Valley, officials say.

“These family units aren’t deciding where they’re going to go. Once they decide to take that trip and leave their home country, they’re placing their lives in the hands of smugglers who at that point will take them from their native countries of Central America and designate where they’re going to go, which stash house they’re going to be dropped off, what route they’re going to take and right now we’re seeing a lot of those families coming towards this part of the country,” Alvarez said.

The cost smugglers charge migrants varies from $3,000 to $5,000 per person, but other “deals” also are offered to lure vulnerable populations, Alvarez said.

“Our intel agents have picked up on two-for-one deals or, ‘If you get caught we’ll waive the fee the second go around.’ They try some things like that,” Alvarez said.

Most migrants are given wristbands identifying the cartel that crossed them and the number of crossings they have already attempted.

I had heard that human traffickers or smugglers were involved in some of the border crossings, but this report illustrates how widespread the problem is at least in the RGV area. Scary stuff!

 
 
 
GregTx
Professor Guide
4.1  seeder  GregTx  replied to  Freewill @4    3 years ago
“It doesn’t make sense. It’s unreasonable to even invite more when we know there’s a high potential that a small percentage of this population will end up in our hospitals and we can’t satisfy the needs of our residents,” Saenz said.

I'm not sure how this isn't something that can't help but be judged as intentional by anyone that pays attention. Thanks for the links.

 
 
 
Freewill
Junior Quiet
4.1.1  Freewill  replied to  GregTx @4.1    3 years ago
I'm not sure how this isn't something that can't help but be judged as intentional by anyone that pays attention.

Not sure that the results of the current policies are intentional, as in reality that could become a political liability really quick, just like the separation of families was for Trump.  But I do think the ignorance of what is really happening at the border today, especially with respect to the Covid and trafficking aspects, and the refusal of the main stream media to fully cover what is going on is most definitely intentional.  Most likely designed to delay or minimize the aforementioned political blowback on their favored politicians.  Hiding or avoiding the truth is the same as not telling it IMHO.  I suppose it could be said that inaction by those in the administration who know darn well what is going on, and then deflecting just because addressing it would not fit a political narrative, is tantamount to intentionally putting the country and the migrants themselves in harms way.  But I'm not sure the reason is to garner the votes of illegal immigrants as some maintain.

I also find it interesting that even here on NT the facts and the truth on this subject are avoided like the plague, or dismissed outright by more than a few.

 
 

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