Greetings from Tucson. A few points about this piece — it’s long so I’ll try to summarize.
There’s a lot happening on the border. What all of this will look like by the end of the summer remains to be seen, but the upshot is this: the future looks grim theintercept.com/2018/06/12/bor…
The government is currently breaking apart families by the hundreds on a weekly basis.
Kids who came to the US with their parents are being turned “unaccompanied” in the eyes of the state.
There’s talk of sending these kids, thousands of them, to camps on US military bases.
While blanket family separation is new, the underlying logic here has been the foundation of US border enforcement strategy for more than two decades.
And it has never been shown to have any demonstrable effect on migration flows.
The Border Patrol has never really shifted from the Clinton-era strategy of Prevention Through Deterrence, which funnels migrants away from cities into harsher terrain, like the desert.
Born out of an assumption that enforcement strategies inform the decision-making process of individual migrants, PTD has fueled an explosion in migrant deaths in the desert.
What’s happening now is, in part, as an extension of the PTD logic.
In recent years, the government has come up with a suite of so-called Consequence Delivery Systems that expand on PTD by adding criminal punishments for migrants.
One of those, Operation Streamline, is a core component of the Trump administration’s border strategy, and it’s a mess.
Through group proceedings, Streamline funnels people charged with crossing the border illegally first through the criminal justice system before passing them off to immigration authorities.
In the past, there was prosecutorial discretion for some groups — asylum seekers, parents with kids, etc.
Not so anymore. Now everyone gets prosecuted.
A public defender here told me that in terms of family separations, most of the cases she’s seen have involved first time offenders. That’s a federal misdemeanor. People are losing their kids over misdemeanors.
At Streamline hearing yesterday, I saw a woman weeping, essentially asking that she and her son, who she was separated from, just be deported. That’s common here. People are begging that the government just deport them together. That’s not happening though.
As @adam_wola noted in this excellent analysis last month, we are nowhere near 100 percent enforcement of zero tolerance. If we were, we would see a collapse in the courts, ports and prisons. wola.org/analysis/jaili…
The administration says ramped-up enforcement is necessary because there’s a surge in illegal crossings, but as the experts at @MigrationPolicy noted last week, that’s a misrepresentation of facts on the ground. migrationpolicy.org/news/crisis-bo…
To the extent there is an important uptick to note, it’s in women, children and families showing up to the border.
One veteran Border Patrol chief calls this group “non-impactable traffic” — meaning people who are going to come no matter the government’s enforcement posture.
The relationship between border enforcement strategies and deterrence has been the subject of years of academic research. Time and again, this research has uncovered no demonstrable relationship between enforcement strategies and migration levels.
In a 2015 survey of 1,100 recent deportees in Mexico, the Journal on Migration and Human Security found that 55 percent of those interviewed intended to return to the US, even after experiencing enforcement firsthand. jmhs.cmsny.org/index.php/jmhs…
Last week, @verainstitute published a study looking specifically Streamline, which again found no demonstrable impact between Streamline and deterrence.
The report did, however, find that Streamline has created chaos in the federal court system and done considerable damage to due process on an enormous scale. Here's a link. vera.org/publications/o…
So why would multiple administrations, including this one, double down on such a disastrous program? Vera points to an embrace of “deterrence theater.”
Quoting from the report: “The mass criminal prosecution and incarceration of immigrants provides the illusion of reducing unauthorized immigration, but statistical analysis provides no evidence of any deterrent effect.”
All of this is particularly concerning for asylum seekers. The administration claims asylum seekers who present themselves at ports of entry have nothing to worry about.
As for the tens of thousands of asylum seekers who present themselves between ports of entry, zero tolerance mandates that these individuals be arrested, prosecuted and sentenced before they can begin their immigration cases.
If these asylum seekers come with kids, those kids are taken and become unaccompanied minors in a catastrophically broken bureaucracy.
One might argue that is the consequence of parents not applying for asylum “the right way.”
A couple points about that.
First, as Isacson notes, if tens of thousands of asylum seekers started showing up at the nation’s 45 understaffed ports, those ports would quickly be overwhelmed.
Second, this argument assumes a level of control in the process of migration that is unrealistic. By some counts, as many as 120,000 Central American migrants have disappeared trying to reach the US through Mexico in recent years.
In response to PTD, a vast smuggling economy has taken hold in Mexico that migrants have to rely on in order to get across the border. Exactly when, where and how those crossings take place is almost never a decision an individual migrant gets to make.
.@leegelernt, of the @ACLU, says the government’s efforts reflect a critical misunderstanding of the calculus of asylum seekers.
The administration’s enforcement posture won’t stop them from coming, he says, it will just create new layers of misery.
Again, where this goes remains to be seen.
As of right now, the government appears content to rely on dubious and institutionally destructive strategies as a response to a purported surge in illegal crossings, along the way creating a crisis of unaccompanied kids
For more on the nuts and bolts of how zero tolerance is playing out in the courts, particularly in California, read this great piece by @MaxRivlinNadlertheappeal.org/chaos-in-the-c…
Fin.
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This week AZ Gov. Doug Ducey began dropping thousands of multi-ton shipping containers in Coronado National Forest to construct an ad hoc border wall in defiance of federal authorities.
It’s easy to write this off as purely a midterms political stunt. The timing and politics are obvious, but it’s worth digging a bit into exactly what’s happening here (apologies in advance, this is going to be a long thread).
First the cost. Ducey started using containers as border barriers on federal land in defiance of federal law in August — in Yuma, AZ — after declaring a state of emergency based on the claim that Arizona is being invaded and the feds have abdicated their security responsibility.
A West Texas jail warden and his twin brother are under arrest for allegedly driving up to a group of migrants at a water tank then fatally shooting one of the migrants in the head and wounding another nytimes.com/2022/09/29/us/…
NEW: Texas jail warden charged with killing migrant was previously accused of serious abuses
The warden who was arrested yesterday and the jail he ran have a long dark history — read more here interc.pt/3dRdI8k
In 2018, @RAICESTEXAS and a coalition of legal advocates published an extensive report on abuses inside the West Texas Detention Center in Sierra Blanca, Texas, a for-profit ICE jail overseen by warden Michael Sheppard.
The news: the last Yellowstone wolf to die in the deadliest hunt the park has seen in a century was killed by one of the park’s veteran backcountry rangers, setting off two ongoing investigations into allegations that law enforcement colluded with hunters to kill wolves.
The ranger, who has since retired, says the allegations are part of a baseless witch hunt, that he wasn’t the only park employee to kill a wolf on Yellowstone’s border, and that he was singled out because the wolf he killed was part of the park’s acclaimed wolf research program.
NEW: The scale and speed of the Biden's current effort to expel Haitian asylum seekers en masse is without comparison in recent history.
The utter absence of infrastructure and resources to support those being removed cannot be overstated. theintercept.com/2021/09/21/bid…
Haitian officials say they simply cannot manage the influx — the most removals the country has received from the US in past seven years was 1,000 individuals.
Right now, the Border Patrol is "working around the clock" to expel more than 12,000 people in a week.
To expedite the process, DHS is not testing the people being expelled for Covid-19 — this despite the fact that a basis for the mass expulsions is a public health order.
As of last week, less than one percent of Haiti's 11.5 million residents were vaccinated.
Thinking today about Nabeela ur Rehman and her brother Zubair. We met in 2013. Nabeela was 9. Zubair was 13. Along with their father Rafiq, they were the first victims of a US drone strike to meet with members of Congress. I was the first reporter they spoke to in the states.
Nabeela’s grandmother, Momina Bibi, was killed in a drone strike in Pakistan in 2012. The family’s unprecedented visit was the result of an extraordinary effort to bring American lawmakers face-to-face with the consequences of unaccountable US policy.
I had written a lot about the war on terror and drone strikes in particular but this was my first time meeting a family directly impacted by those operations.
This week, Daniel Hale, a former intelligence analyst facing more than a decade in prison for leaking documents on the US drone program, filed an 11-page letter laying out the reasons for his actions.
Hale pleaded guilty in March. The government, seeking the max sentence in the case, has strongly implied that he was the source of a series stories for The Intercept — The Intercept, as a matter of policy, does not comment on matters relating to the identity of anonymous sources.
What we can do is focus on Hale's own words and the story that they tell. Some key sections of his remarkable letter to follow.