Skip to main content
OnlineVisas
USA

District Judge Halts The Policy Of Sending Asylum Seekers Back To Mexico While They Wait For Their Cases To Be Heard

U.S. District Judge Richard Seeborg in San Francisco blocks the policy of sending asylum seekers awaiting adjudication to Mexico.

Jon Velie
(Updated August 29, 2022)
District Judge Halts The Policy Of Sending Asylum Seekers Back To Mexico While They Wait For Their Cases To Be Heard

jon-velie-round

On Monday, April 8, 2019, U.S. District Judge Richard Seeborg in San Francisco blocked the recent policy of returning to Mexico the Central-American asylum seekers awaiting adjudication of their requests for admission.

Before the detainment policy, asylum seekers were typically released into the U.S. while they waited for a formal case decision. The Trump administration has tried to justify sending asylum seekers to Mexico because detainment centers have reached full capacity.

U.S. District Judge Seeborg found that the policy “does not apply to these circumstances, and even if it did, further procedural protections would be required.” Furthermore, the judge asserted that the policy does not “conform to the government’s acknowledged obligation to ensure aliens are not returned to unduly dangerous circumstances.”

The ruling is to take effect Friday, April 12, 2019, giving the Trump administration time to seek a stay of proceedings from a higher court.

The US-Mexico border

A series of recent court decisions have slowed border policies of the current administration. In December, the Supreme Court rejected the administration’s request to reinstate the policy prohibiting immigrants from seeking asylum in cases where the individual illegally crossed the Southern border.

Asylum applications require a completion of the Form I-589, Application for Asylum and for Withholding of Removal.

Tags:
ASYLUMASYLUM SEEKERIMMIGRATIONTRUMP

Related Posts

USCIS issued new procedural guidance suspending entry for asylum seekers at the southern U.S. border in defiance of humanitarian principles.

Trump Administration signed an executive immigration order blocking travel to the U.S. from 7 predominately Muslim countries.

In late January 2025, a diplomatic dispute erupted between the United States and Colombia migration