Move is meant to provide relief as holding facilities reach maximum capacity following expected migrant surge
Border Patrol agents will release aliens from custody the moment Title 42 ends, two senior agency officials tell the Washington Free Beacon.
The move is meant to provide relief for authorities on the southern border as holding facilities reach maximum capacity following an expected migrant surge. The policy removes tracking mechanisms and check-in requirements usually given to migrants released while awaiting asylum hearings. It is unclear whether the revised policy has any mechanisms in place to ensure aliens will comply with future asylum summons.
Experts anticipate that up to 14,000 aliens a day could enter the United States in the weeks following the termination of Title 42, a public health rule that allowed law enforcement to quickly deport aliens. Homeland Security secretary Alejandro Mayorkas has privately admitted that the end of Title 42 will "strain our workforce, our communities, and our entire system." On Tuesday, Biden said the U.S.-Mexico border will be "chaotic for a while."
The policy set to take effect is called "Released on Own Recognizance" (ORs). ORs differ from the normal "alternatives to detention" protocol in that they do not require migrants to check in with immigration authorities before they are given a court date. Those check-ins theoretically allow authorities to know the location of an alien in case they do not comply with their release orders, although deportations have plummeted under Biden.
Those changes, the two senior agency officials said, raise serious security concerns and contradict White House assertions that the federal government is prepared for the end of Title 42. Agents are already overwhelmed at several points along the southern border and do not anticipate they will have enough manpower to even provide aliens with...
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