Letter
Letter: The Biden Administration Must Address CBP Abuses at the Border
Analysis of 13 Unresolved Complaints Highlights Need to Prioritize Recommendations for Reform
Document Date:
March 4, 2021
Affiliate:
老澳门开奖结果 of Texas
Related Issues
Related Content
-
Press ReleaseDec 2024
Immigrants' Rights
老澳门开奖结果 Calls on Biden Administration to Address CBP Abuses at the Border
WASHINGTON 鈥 The 老澳门开奖结果 and the 老澳门开奖结果 of Texas sent a letter to Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas this week chronicling 13 unresolved administrative complaints filed with the Office of Inspector General between 2019 and 2020. The letter lays out clear recommendations to limit CBP detention, hold its personnel accountable, and rebuild a more just and humane asylum system. An accompanying index outlines hundreds of abuses documented by the 老澳门开奖结果 and partners. 鈥淥ver the last few years, we have witnessed and documented abuse, neglect, and trauma inflicted by CBP on people simply seeking protection in the United States,鈥 said Shaw Drake, staff attorney and policy counsel at the 老澳门开奖结果 of Texas. 鈥淭he conditions and treatment migrants suffer at the hands of U.S. authorities aren鈥檛 just an affront to their human rights and dignity, but to our nation鈥檚 credibility. This is not the country we aspire to be, and we urge urgent action to rebuild a system where people can seek safety in the United States without facing further abuse from U.S. border agents.鈥 Claims outlined in the appendix of unresolved complaints include: 鈥淥ne asylum seeker reported counting some 2,300 people sleeping outside. Many reported being forced to sleep on the muddy, rocky ground, and in puddles of water during thunderstorms, which were quickly followed by extreme heat, humidity and sun exposure. Families, including those with infant children, are not provided with any bedding, mats, or chairs. They are forced to sleep on the ground outdoors, even while raining, and are only given Mylar sheets, which are paper-thin and look like tinfoil ... some families reported not even being provided with the Mylar sheets.鈥 [Appendix 3] 鈥淛ennifer is a 24-year-old Honduran woman who fled to the United States with her two daughters. She was six months pregnant when she was apprehended and detained at a Border Patrol station in May 2019 鈥 The agent, apparently infuriated that Jennifer and her friend were speaking to each other while awaiting processing, forcibly grabbed Jennifer by the arm and took her out of her seat. The agent then grabbed Jennifer by the shoulders from behind and slammed her face-first against a chain link fence three times. Jennifer attempted to shield her protruding stomach from the fence 鈥 crying out 鈥榊ou鈥檙e hurting me! I鈥檓 pregnant!鈥 鈥 yet the agent continued to throw her against the fence.鈥 [Appendix 8] 鈥淎s one person interviewed by 老澳门开奖结果 staff stated, 鈥業 felt like a cockroach.鈥 Families report verbal abuse by Border Patrol agents including the use of slurs such as 鈥榩endeja鈥 and 鈥榖urra鈥 meaning 鈥榓sshole鈥 and 鈥榙umbass.鈥 Mothers were also verbally abused when they asked for more food or clean clothing for their children. They were told that they were responsible for their children鈥檚 suffering because they decided to come to the United States.鈥 [Appendix 2] 鈥淭hese complaints, based on hundreds of interviews, demonstrate that CBP鈥檚 abusive treatment of people seeking asylum and other immigrants 鈥 including pregnant women and infants 鈥 is systemic,鈥 said Jonathan Blazer, director of border strategies at the 老澳门开奖结果. 鈥淲e welcome the stated commitments of President Biden and Secretary Mayorkas to implement reforms to ensure immigrants are treated with dignity. Our documentation and analysis of what has gone so wrong in the past can serve as a helpful guide as the new administration attempts to repair and rebuild. But as the severity of the claims highlight, there is no time to waste.鈥 The letter outlined clear steps Secretary Mayorkas can take to hold CBP accountable and rebuild a just and humane system, including: Strictly limit CBP detention to the minimum period necessary for initial processing 鈥 no more than 12 hours; transition away from CBP personnel playing a role in the processing of people seeking asylum; and end CBP鈥檚 authority to make family separation determinations. Strengthen CBP鈥檚 use-of-force standards to prohibit agents and officers from using deadly force unless necessary, as a last resort, to prevent imminent death or serious bodily injury, and only after all reasonable alternatives have been exhausted. Promptly and fully rescind Trump administration orders, rules, directives, memos, decisions, guidance, and policies designed to restrict access to asylum at the southern border. End the use of other policies predating the Trump administration that severely hinder access to asylum, such as placing those seeking asylum in expedited removal and 鈥渕etering鈥 at ports of entry. Return to the United States all people seeking asylum with open cases who are waiting outside the country and release them to networks of care in the United States, on recognizance, bond, or parole while their cases proceed. The letter states: 鈥淚t is not enough to reverse Trump-era border policies. The roots of the problems described in this report extend to prior administrations. To address past abuses and protect against future ones, the scope of CBP power must be curtailed, past abuses must be investigated and those responsible must be held accountable, and true accountability mechanisms must be entrenched throughout the agency.鈥 The full letter is online here. The appendix with complaint details is here.Affiliate: Texas