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More than a dozen new tents have popped up
at two locations along the U.S. border with Mexico.
These are temporary courtrooms for migrants
who are claiming asylum.
They offer a glimpse into how the Trump administration’s
unprecedented crackdown on immigration
is playing out with judges deciding the fate of hundreds
of asylum seekers via video, and in makeshift facilities.
We pinpointed their locations and satellite imagery
and tracked their expansion over a month.
We can see them here, along the border in Laredo, Tex.
There are several long tents, subdivided
into courts, where 420 asylum hearings are planned each day.
And in Brownsville, Tex.,
another set of tent courthouses.
This one, for more than 700 cases a day.
Judges will handle cases via video.
A top immigration official spoke
recently, praising the technology.
“Spectacular video-conferencing facility, the mechanics
of that will be used for hearings.”
But some advocates have said that this will worsen already
limited due process for asylum seekers.
And a 2017 Justice Department study also
raised additional concerns about video
and the difficulty for judges to analyze
eye contact, nonverbal forms of communication and
body language.
These courtroom tents are part of the so-called
Remain in Mexico policy, which is formally
known as the Migrant Protection Protocols.
It was implemented in January and aimed
at limiting the number of asylum seekers arriving
in the U.S.
“They will have to wait for approval
to come into the United States: If they are granted asylum
by a U.S. judge,
they will be welcomed into America, if they are not,
they will be removed to their home countries.”
Typically, people seeking asylum
were allowed to remain in the United States
while their cases went through courts around the country,
due to the danger
they would face at home.
Putting these tent courts along the border
allows the U.S. to send asylum seekers to Mexico
until it’s time for their hearings.
But this could also put people in harm’s way.
The location of these tent courts
means some asylum seekers will be
forced to await their trials in some
of the most dangerous cities along the border in Mexico.
Brownsville and Laredo border
the Mexican state of Tamaulipas, where the U.S. State Department
has issued a travel advisory to the same degree
as for Syria and Afghanistan.
American citizens are told not to travel here due to crime
and kidnapping, and human rights groups
have documented cases of rape, abduction and murder
of migrants.
Meanwhile, U.S. immigration authorities
are considering additional locations for tent courts.
But by forcing asylum seekers to wait in high-risk areas,
some migrants may never be able to return
for their day in court.