Legal Sidebari
Asylum Processing at the Border: Legal Basics
March 19, 2021
Recent
statistics and reports from the southern border show a sharp increase in the arrival of non-U.S.
nationals (called
“aliens” under governing law) who lack visas or other valid entry documents. (This
Sidebar generally refers to such aliens encountered at the cusp of entry into the United States as
“undocumented migrants” to distinguish them from those encountered within the interior of the country.)
The trend includes a
notable uptick in the arrival of
unaccompanied alien children (UACs). Department of
Homeland Security (DHS) officials hav
e opined that the current surge in undocumented migration could
exceed th
e spike that occurred in 2019. As a result, questions have emerged about how the Biden
Administration intends to address the surge and, in particular, how it plans to process the migrants’ claims
for humanitarian protection from persecution or torture.
The humanitarian protections available to undocumented migrants at the border under U.S. immigration
law inclu
de asylum (a discretionary protection from identity-based persecution abroad)
, withholding of
removal (a mandatory protection from such persecution),
and withholding or deferral of removal under
the Convention Against Torture (a mandatory protection from government-sponsored torture abroad).
Asylum is the most robust of these protections and the only one that offers a dedicated pathway to lawful
permanent residence and citizenship. It also requires th
e lowest standard of proof but, unlike the other
two, may be denied for discretionary reasons even to aliens who qualify for it. Despite their differences,
however, all of these forms of humanitarian protection have similar implications for the regulation of
undocumented migration to the border, as explained further below. (For brevity and per
common usage,
this Sidebar refers to the legal mechanisms for evaluating claims for any of these humanitarian
protections as “asylum processing” or “asylum procedure.”)
For now, the Biden Administration has mostly retained
a pandemic-related policy implemented by the
Trump Administration that, on public health grounds, permits DHS to expel undocumented migrants at
the border without any asylum processing. The Administration is currently reassessing that policy and has
exempted UACs from it. How the Administration would approach asylum processing at the border
without the pandemic-related policy remains unclear.
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Why Is Asylum Processing at the Border a Challenging
Issue?
The Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) generally
prohibits aliens from coming to the border to apply
for admission unless they first obtai
n visas or
other valid travel documents. If aliens present themselves at
a port of entry without valid travel documents, or if they cross the border illegally between ports, they are
subject to removal from the United States. This general rule against undocumented travel allows
government authorities to identify some aliens who do not qualify for admission before they reach the
United States, thereby reducing the need for burdensome enforcement measures such as removal and
detention.
Humanitarian protections create the principal exception to this general rule. The INA
allows aliens to
apply for humanitarian protections from U.S. territory, including at a port of entry or after crossing the
border illegally. They need not obtain visas or any other form of pre-clearance first. Indeed, such forms of
pre-clearance are generally unavailable. There is
no asylum visa. Refugee processing i
s available from
abroad, but only to a limited extent.
Thus, the legal framework calls for the removal of undocumented migrants unless they qualify for
humanitarian protections. This framework creates a tension between border enforcement and
humanitarian protections, as legal scholars hav
e long noted, and gives rise to a formidable procedural
challenge. The immigration system must distinguish between valid and invalid protection claims swiftly
enough to discourage illegitimate claimants from traveling to the border and avoid leaving legitimate
claimants in extended limbo, while also striving for fair and accurate adjudications. The Supreme Court
made clear in 2020 that Congress has exceptional latitude to address this procedural challenge
legislatively. Far more so than in the field of criminal procedure, which is subject to significant
constitutional constraints, Congress may write the rules for asylum procedure at the border.
Asylum processing is only one component of the challenge posed by undocumented migration. Even
without the need to evaluate asylum claims, the logistical and operational challenges of apprehending
aliens encountered at the border, processing them for removal or release, and holding them during
processing can overwhelm immigration officials during influxes. UAC processing at the border, for
example, poses more of a logistical and operational challenge than a challenge of asylum procedure. As
described below, t
he procedural laws for UACs focus on proper care and in most cases call for no
assessment at the border of their entitlement to humanitarian protections. Yet, during heavy flows of
UACs, immigration officials still
struggle to transfer children out of
temporary holding facilities at the
border and into licensed shelters for children within 72 hours, as t
he federal law requires.
What Is the Statutory Framework for Asylum Processing
at the Border?
In 1996, Congress amended the INA to create the
expedited removal system. In conjunction with other
statutes and court rulings, this system establishes a
framework for asylum processing at the border that
can be summarized as follows:
1.
Screening. Asylum claims by undocumented migrants at the border should be screened
for a level of potential merit called
“credible fear,” and rejected if they lack such potential
merit, before being referred to trial-type proceedings in
immigration court. (A notable
exception is that UACs from countries other than Mexico and Canada generally go
directly to immigration court proceedings without a screening process, whether or not
they make asylum claims.)
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2.
Detention. Asylum seekers must be detained during the screening process and, if they
establish credible fear,
may be detained or released on parole during subsequent
immigration court proceedings. (Exceptions exist for aliens in family units, who
generally are not detained beyond the screening process due to t
he Flores Settlement
Agreement, and for UACs, who must generally be transferred from holding facilities at
the border to licensed shelters within 72 hours, and then released to a suitable placement.)
Expedited removal is a streamlined procedure that applies primarily to aliens encountered at or near the
border. It stands in contrast to the standard process for the removal of an alien from the United States,
which requires trial-type proceedings in immigration court—known as
“formal removal proceedings”—in
which the alien may present testimony and other evidence, including about whether he or she qualifies for
humanitarian protections. Through expedited removal, DHS may swiftly remove undocumented migrants
encountered near the border, so long as they do not establish credible fear or fall under other exceptions.
Undocumented migrants who establish credible fear must be referred to formal removal proceedings.
Expedited removal does not apply to UACs, as mentioned above. Within three days of apprehending a
UAC, Customs and Border Protection (CBP) must
transfer the child to a licensed shelter run by the Office
of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) within the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). ORR is
then required to seek
a suitable placement for the child outside of federal custody, except in unusual
cases. The child’s removal case, including any asylum claim, goes to formal removal proceedings. This
framework for UACs has a
n important exception for Mexican UACs: unlike UACs from noncontiguous
territories, CBP may allow Mexican UACs to return to Mexico voluntarily, subject to certain limitations.
(Canadian UACs are rare but are also subject to the exception.) According t
o DHS statistics, given this
exception, in practice the vast majority of Mexican UACs are quickly repatriated to Mexico while UACs
from other countries often gain legal immigration status and rarely face removal within several years of
arrival.
How Has the Executive Branch Implemented the
Statutory Framework?
The INA framework leaves the executive branch with discretion on some essential points about how
asylum processing works at the border, including the following.
First,
DHS
does not have to place undocumented migrants into expedited removal. Instead, under current
case law, it can choose to place undocumented migrants directly into immigration court proceedings. (See
Figure 1 below.) To do so, DHS typically releases the migrant from custody with
a notice to appear in
immigration court (“NTA”). The practice of releasing undocumented migrants with NTAs in lieu of
placing them in expedited removal is sometimes called
“catch and release.”
Traditionally, DHS has relied on this practice when heavy flows of undocumented migration strain the
agency’s capacity to detain aliens during expedited removal and credible fear proceedings. For some
periods of the Obama Administrati
on (especially from 2014-2016) and the Trump Administration
(especially during
early 2019), DHS generally released family units apprehended near the border with
NTAs rather than processing them for expedited removal. DHS statistics
indicate that, largely due to
immigration court backlogs, the great majority of family units processed in this fashion remain in the
United States in
“unresolved statuses” for several years.
The
Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP, or “Remain in Mexico”)—broadly implemented under the
Trump Administration in mid-2019—introduced an alteration: under it, when DHS issued NTAs to some
non-Mexican migrants in lieu of expedited removal, it required them to wait in Mexico during their
immigration court proceedings instead of releasing them into the United States. There are
questions about

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the legality of the MPP, and the Biden Administration has suspended new enrollments and begun to
unwind it.
Figure 1. Discretionary Nature of Expedited Removal at the Southern Border
Source: CRS.
Second, DHS has significant discretion on operational issues, including where migrants are held during
credible fear proceedings. The INA
instructs DHS to conduct credible fear interviews “either at a port of
entry or at such other place designated by [DHS].” Traditionally, DHS has conducted the interviews at
Immigration and Customs and Enforcement (ICE) detention facilities in the interior after transferring
migrants from CBP custody at the border. When conducted in this fashion, the credible fear process
typically takes
two to three weeks (including time for immigration judge review of negative
determinations). Under the Trump Administration, DHS created two pilot programs known as
Prompt
Asylum Claim Review (PACR) and Humanitarian Asylum Review Process (HARP) to conduct credible
fear proceedings in CBP custody on an expedited,
five-to-seven-day timeline. The Biden Administration
has
terminated these policies.
Third, DHS may have some authority to trigger stricter screening standards at the border, but the extent of
this authority remains unresolved. Credible fear is a
“low bar,” as the Supreme Court has explained.
According to GAO statistics from fiscal years 2015–2019, about
77% of asylum seekers a
nd 87% of
asylum seekers in family units establish credible fear. However, under the Trump Administration, the
executive branch pursued various policies aimed at imposing stricter screening standards. These policies
can be categorized as follows.
Creating Asylum Ineligibilities. The IN
A authorizes DHS and the Department of Justice
(DOJ) to narrow asylum eligibility by regulation. The Trump Administration invoked this
authority in 2019 t
o issue a regulation that rendered most aliens ineligible for asylum if
they reached the southern border after transiting through a third country without seeking
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protection there (the Transit Rule). For aliens ineligible for asylum under the Transit
Rule, the regulation subjected them to a stricter screening threshold known as
“reasonable fear” that applies to aliens who are eligible only for withholding of removal
and Convention against Torture protections (which have a higher burden of proof than
asylum). According to GAO statistics, only about
30% of asylum seekers establish
reasonable fear. The Transit Rule is currently
blocked by federal court order on the
ground that it likely violates the INA, although the Supreme Court
allowed DHS and
DOJ to implement it during an earlier phase of the litigation. Federal courts also blocked
a conceptually similar regulation that rendered unlawful entrants ineligible for asylum.
Safe Third Country Agreements. The INA al
so authorizes DHS and DOJ to render
aliens ineligible for asylum by entering into safe third country agreements (STCAs) with
countries that have “full and fair” asylum procedures. STCAs allow DHS to transfer
asylum seekers to those countries rather than evaluating their claims in the United States.
The Trump Administrati
on created STCAs with Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador
(in a departure from the statutory language, DHS called these “Asylum Cooperative
Agreements”). Of these, only the Guatemala agreement was implemented, a
nd only to a
limited extent. The regulatory framework underlying these STCAs allowed DHS to
remove an eligible asylum seeker at the screening phase of expedited removal, unless the
asylum seeker established that it was
“more likely than not” that he or she would face
persecution or torture in the STCA country. This “more likely than not” standard was
stricter than credible fear or reasonable fear. The Biden Administration ha
s suspended
these three STCAs (a more long-standing
STCA with Canada remains in place but is
undergoing
legal challenge in Canada).
Pandemic-Related Public Health Bar. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the
Trump Administrati
on implemented a policy that mostly shut down asylum processing
for undocumented migrants at the border. This policy, issued by the Centers for Disease
Control but implemented by DHS, is often called the “Title 42” policy because it purports
to derive statutory authority from
a public health provision of Title 42 of the U.S. Code.
Wit
h few exceptions, the policy—as in effect during the Trump Administration—allowed
CBP to expel undocumented migrants (including UACs) to Mexico or their countries of
origin without any asylum screenings at all. The Biden Administration has
exempted
UACs from the policy but otherwise appears to have left it in place pending a
reassessment of its merits
. Ongoing lawsuits challenge the policy’s legality. Also,
Mexican authorities hav
e reportedly limited CBP’s ability to return Central American
families to Mexico under the policy.
Regulatory Outlook and Reform Proposals
As noted above, the Biden Administration ha
s terminated or begun to roll back the Trump
Administration’s major pre-pandemic policies for processing asylum seekers at the border, including the
MPP. The pandemic-related Title 42 policy, however, remains mostly in place for now (though not for
UACs). Beyond that, the form that asylum processing will take under this Administration remains unclear.
The President has
signaled a commitment to expanding access in Central America to refugee processing
and other forms of protection—measures the Administration hopes will eventually reduce the strain on
asylum processing at the border by allowing people to apply for relief closer to home. Still, the concrete
details of how asylum processing at the border will work in coming years are likely to emerge only after
the termination of the Title 42 policy.
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Proposals to reform asylum procedure at the border often focus
on expediting the adjudication process in
immigration court, with a goal of
delivering definitive judgments more quickly. The proposals vary as to
whether asylum seekers, including families, should be detained during these proceedings.
Somewhat along the lines of what the Biden Administration has proposed to do administratively, a
different category of bill provisions would seek to reduce pressure on the border by expanding refugee
processing in Central America. Som
e bills, including t
he U.S. Citizenship Act in the 117th Congress,
would do this as an alternative to asylum protections (i.e., permitting but not requiring Central Americans
to avail themselves of expanded options for refugee processing)
. Others would provide expanded
processing as a trade-off that limits asylum eligibility at the border (i.e., requiring such aliens to make use
of refugee processing options to a certain extent). Other ideas in this category
include expanding
immigration parole, special immigrant visa programs, and work visa programs for Central Americans.
Author Information
Ben Harrington
Legislative Attorney
Disclaimer
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