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Asylum-seekers thought they were following the rules. Now some are told to start over.

Asylum-seekers thought they were following the rules. Now some are told to start over

Source NPR

The Trump administration is stripping protections of some asylum applicants who filed as far back as 2019.

NPR has learned that dozens of immigrants across the U.S. have received letters in the mail notifying them that their asylum cases have been dismissed by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), a branch of the Department of Homeland Security.

The reason, according to the letters: These asylum-seekers, many of whom entered between 2019 and 2022, did not receive a mandatory screening, known as a "credible fear" interview, at the border.

The interview is conducted by an asylum officer once someone has been detained or has arrived in the United States. It is meant as an opportunity for a person to describe any fear of persecution they may face if they are returned to their home country.

The U.S. didn't have enough asylum officers to do credible fear interviews for every person crossing the border, given the huge influx of border-crossers starting with the COVID-19 pandemic, at the end of the first Trump administration and during the Biden administration, experts told NPR. Now it appears that the new Trump administration is dismissing applications, effectively making people start over on a process they began years ago.

This round of asylum case dismissals is the latest effort by the Trump administration to strip protections from those who have been in the U.S. for years. In the past few months, the administration has limited the ways in which people can seek asylum, has made the process more expensive and is now reviewing already filed claims and dismissing them if parts of the complex application are missing. But as officials expand the scope of whom they are arresting, detaining and deporting, lawyers fear their clients who have been waiting years for their asylum interviews may get caught up in the effort to conduct mass deportations.

Asylum is a form of protection granted to those who either have already entered the U.S. or are at a port of entry, having left their home country. After an application is filed, applicants receive work permits, pay taxes and can enroll in school.

"You're literally making documented people, again, undocumented, and they're already in here," said Michelle Marty Rivera, an immigration attorney who has dozens of clients who have received these letters. "You are canceling employment authorization. You're virtually converting people that are following the normal traditional asylum rules and leaving them without a status and without protection and asking them to show their faces to ICE."

Lawyers told NPR that in some cases, their clients may have been marked for "expedited removal" when they first entered the country. That is a form of deportation for people who have been in the U.S. for less than two years.

When asked about the asylum application dismissals, USCIS spokesman Matthew Tragesser said that if upon reviewing an application, USCIS discovers that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) or Customs and Border Protection designated a person as in "expedited removal," USCIS administratively closes the application due to a lack of jurisdiction.

"This is a long-standing practice that is not new," Tragesser said. Per USCIS' process, the credible fear interview is key to pulling someone out of expedited removal prior to filing for asylum.

"The credible fear [interview] is considered a screening tool. And essentially there's a higher standard that when someone achieves that, then they can then go through the asylum process," said Morgan Bailey, a former USCIS official who served under both Trump and Biden, adding that for the last 15 years, the agency has not been able to keep up with the number of asylum-seekers who need credible fear interviews. "There aren't enough asylum officers to cover the workload, but there has also been such an increase in the number of asylum applications."

But now, immigration attorneys are warning that immigrants are facing the consequences of that shortage.

There are different versions of the letters that asylum applicants received, and NPR has reviewed some of them. Applicants began receiving them in July. The letters say that all processing of their asylum application is terminated. In some letters, applicants are told to await a notice from ICE about when their credible fear interview will be scheduled. In others, the letters tell them to report to ICE first and request the interview. Some are not clear on next steps.

Attorney Maria Florencia Garcia has one client who entered through the southern border and was originally put into expedited removal but was released into the U.S. before he received his interview.

"Once he was released, they did schedule a credible fear interview, but [it] was canceled. We tried to get a reschedule for a couple of years. It never happened," Florencia Garcia said, adding that they applied for asylum anyway because that must be filed within a year of being in the country. But in recent weeks, that client got the letter notifying them of the dismissal.

He's unable to work. He's not going to be able to renew his employment authorization card," Florencia Garcia said. "The only way that he's going to be able to proceed is by showing up to ICE, telling them that he has a fear of return, and that will likely get him detained."

Arno Lemus, another immigration attorney, sees this effort from the second Trump administration as an attempt to reclassify a certain set of asylum applicants who primarily came in during the Biden years.

"They're just doing the process that was allotted to them that was legal and provided to them the moment that they presented themselves in the U.S.," Lemus said, noting that some of his clients have also received the letters. "And now the government's wanting to retroactively go back."

Lemus agrees with USCIS that the policy is not necessarily new — the credible fear interviews are the prerequisite to filing for asylum. But like other attorneys, Lemus said he has clients who have been waiting for upwards of six years for their asylum case to be reviewed.

"The issue is that people were already released into the U.S. They've already established years of processing. They've paid taxes. They've got jobs. Some of them have made investments in the U.S.," Lemus said

The Trump administration this summer unveiled a new policy requiring immigrants who entered the country illegally to be put in detention without an opportunity for release while they fight their cases.

Immigration lawyers told NPR that they are concerned that their clients, who were awaiting their asylum interviews, will get detained if they report to ICE to schedule their credible fear interviews.

"There's a lack of trust. There's a lot of uncertainty that makes people afraid. It makes people not want to fight their cases, whether they're strong or not," said Florencia Garcia. "They just don't want to risk it."

ICE has increased the number of arrests at immigration courts, and high-profile worksite enforcement operations have left many afraid.

"You go to court — you get detained; you go to your ICE appointment — you get detained; you go to work — you get detained; you apply for asylum — you were processed incorrectly," Lemus said. "You just can't do anything."
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SatanBurger · 36-40, F
Trump been doing that, that happened even to a veteran who fought and because he had drug charges from 20 years ago, they deported him. This was in the time that ptsd wasn't well known and that's what he ended up having.

There's numerous people who are going for routine appts to keep their green cards and being deported.

It's not about illegal immigration, it's just white nationalism and them thinking about excuses
missyann · 56-60
@MarkPaul The thing is you don’t bring anything to successfully counter what I bring. Are you bringing is insults?
MarkPaul · 26-30, M
@missyann I keep showing (SHOWING) you where the talking points that have been prepared to manipulate you are wrong, incomplete, or misleading. You simply dismiss them and then express outrage because you feel insulted. Where is your spine? If you find that, it will lead you to your brain so you can flip the switch to on.
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missyann · 56-60
@JSul3 You know why’d they wear masks If you and your family were threatened you would wear a mask too
Why are they and their family receiving threats is the question Why have they been physically attacked ? They are only doing their job

Why do lib protestors and antifa wear masks? I assume they don’t want people to know who they are

I don’t know how many have been arrested but it seems to me they come across a lot of illegal immigrants in the process of looking
JSul3 · 70-79
@sunsporter1649 BS as usual.
missyann · 56-60
@JSul3 why are ICE agent’s being attacked? Who is throwing things at them?
missyann · 56-60
@JSul3 Police usually aren’t physically attacked for doing their jobs

FYI ICE are legit law enforcement
Thinkerbell · 41-45, F
"The U.S. didn't have enough asylum officers to do credible fear interviews for every person crossing the border, given the huge influx of border-crossers starting with the COVID-19 pandemic, at the end of the first Trump administration and during the Biden administration, experts told NPR."


Attributing the "huge influx" to anything other than a deliberate policy by the Biden administration is absurd, as is the pretense that anything remotely similar occurred during Trump's first term. The brief peak under Trump occurred in mid-2019, about 6 months before Covid-19 first appeared in China, and nearly a year before it had spread to the Americas.
JSul3 · 70-79
@sunsporter1649 Got anything original Sport?

Release the Epstein files and stop protecting sexual predators and pedophiles.
sunsporter1649 · 70-79, M
JSul3 · 70-79
@sunsporter1649

Release the Epstein files and stop protecting sexual predators and pedophiles.
specman · 51-55, MVIP
NPR didn’t they close down.
JSul3 · 70-79
@specman That would be false.
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JSul3 · 70-79
@specman LOL!
In your dreams.
ididntknow · 56-60, M
Question, How many illegal immigrants, came into America from January 2021 until January 2025
JSul3 · 70-79
@ididntknow
It's not possible to provide an exact figure for the number of illegal immigrants who entered the U.S. between January 2021 and January 2025, as official data tracks border encounters and the unauthorized immigrant population, not the exact number of people who enter illegally and evade detection. However, over 11 million border encounters were recorded during that period, and the number of unauthorized immigrants in the U.S. grew from approximately 10.5 million in early 2021 to 10.9 million by early 2024, but this figure reflects the total unauthorized population, not just new entries.
Understanding the Data
Border Encounters:
U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) data shows a high number of encounters at the border, which can serve as a proxy for entries. From January 2021 through the first few months of 2025, this number was approximately 11 million encounters, according to the Department of Homeland Security.
Total Unauthorized Immigrant Population:
This figure includes people who entered without authorization, as well as those who overstayed a valid visa. The Pew Research Center estimated the total unauthorized immigrant population in the U.S. was around 10.5 million in early 2021, rising to 10.9 million by early 2024.
Challenges in Counting:
There is no definitive way to know how many individuals enter the country without being apprehended by border patrol. The high encounter numbers in recent years can be a result of increased border security and detection efforts, not necessarily a rise in entries.
Key Factors
Parolees and Asylum Seekers:
The increase in the unauthorized population was driven partly by individuals granted parole or those seeking asylum.
Long-Term Residents:
A significant portion of the unauthorized immigrant population has been in the U.S. for decades, not just in the recent period.
sunsporter1649 · 70-79, M
@JSul3 We get it, one can commit any crime they want, as long as they don't get caught, eh?
Human Rights never did make sense in the West!
Making it clear to everyone will keep many people away.
BohoBabe · M
Like we all knew, it was never about legal status.
missyann · 56-60
They can blame those who have lied committed fraud and brought crime and brought unvetted criminals namely Biden
JSul3 · 70-79
@missyann OMG!
Are you insane?
It called Commerce!
Trucks enter/exit every day at the ports or entry between Mexico and the US.

People cross daily to work in the US, then return to Mexico at the end of the world day.

Have you EVER been to El Paso, Laredo, or Eagle Pass, TX?
missyann · 56-60
@JSul3 They’re ( illegal immigrants, )not sneaking across a border to live here

I misunderstood what you meant
boudinMan · 61-69, M
@JSul3 ICE agents wouldn't be wearing masks if dims weren't doxxing them.
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missyann · 56-60
@SatanBurger Agree to disagree
oldguy73 · 70-79, M
JSul3 · 70-79
@oldguy73
My bet is that you lack the attention span to read and digest the articles.
oldguy73 · 70-79, M
@JSul3 well, your bet would be lost, I tell you, but online no one believes things, but i can very, very well understand things, your articles are always anti-trump, you are in need of a life, here you just demonstrate your hateness of a person, try to thing, say to yourself, why do i every day make fun of a person, and there are many, many more worse, but i like hating him, get help
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sunsporter1649 · 70-79, M
Reason10 · 70-79, M
You already lost the argument with NPR as the source.
JSul3 · 70-79
@Reason10 Other sources will confirm....but likely not Fox News.
Google is your friend.
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missyann · 56-60
@Reason10 Amen Amen Amen ❤🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
JSul3 · 70-79
@Reason10 That photo is from 2018.
These folks were seeking asylum in the USA.
Are any of them carrying weapons?
missyann · 56-60
@JSul3 It is outdated. The immigration crisis is worse today. It’s not about how many are crossing at one time It’s what they are bringing

President Trump is right when he says these countries aren’t sending their best people. We get the criminals

No one should EVER be allowed enter without a criminal background check

 
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