Today the court has 101 people scheduled to appear today for an initial MPP hearing, but only 46 people were brought to court from the border.
I’ll update more after court is over.
Let me explain how today went.
That partially happened to me today. I was only allowed to watch half of the hearings.
46 people appeared today, out of 101 cases scheduled.
Many were sent back months ago; one person crossed on July 11, and this was her first time in court. She'd been waiting in Ciudad Juarez since July.
Many people, faced with months of dangerous conditions in Juarez, may have given up and gone home.
Some may not have appeared because a cartel kidnapped them. We don't know.
After CBP, ICE contractors drive them to court.
Today I'm there to see IJ Gonzalez's docket. Her courtroom fits 20-30 people. They scheduled 101. 46 showed up.
Today, they broke up the 46 people into two groups. I wasn't allowed to watch the first, for space reasons. I only got to watch the second group.
El Paso has a small immigration bar; less than 300 lawyers in the whole city.
There are 13,000+ in MPP who need lawyers.
But this was also a first hearing. And because there were so many people, barely anything happened. world.wng.org/2019/09/a_bad_…
But because court was so crowded today, all the judge did was advise people of their rights, talk about the process, then tell them to come back Nov. 6th—that's another 2 months.
During a break, one man exasperatedly remarked he might have to wait through to 2020, not knowing that he absolutely will.
There's no stability in the meanwhile.
Halfway through, a 3-year-old boy started to whimper and cry in the back. I don't know if it was exhaustion, or if he was overwhelmed, or what. His mom tried to shush him. The judge kept going.
Then it was question time. 5 people asked questions. I'll go over each one.
"Do I have to return to Mexico? Is that mandatory?"
The judge wearily replied that it was up to the Department of Homeland Security's discretion, and not her.
"All of the documents that were given to us are in English. ... Are there any copies in Spanish that we can get, so we can understand them?"
The judge said no. Regulations require them to be in English.
"I do not have the resources to get an attorney."
The judge told her to call the list of free legal services they had all gotten. But those organizations are swamped.
"I contacted [the groups on the list], and they said they can't help me with my case because I'm in Mexico. What should I do? Who else should I contact? Can I get another list?"
The judge said no. Keep trying.
"My husband abandoned me and left me with my kids in Mexico. I have no job or a fixed place to stay in Mexico. What should I do?"
The judge told her to tell DHS she's afraid to return to Mexico. It won't help.
Those in court today will have to wait at least 4-6 months or more to have their cases heard. Virtually none will have lawyers, and will lose their cases as a result.
Tens of thousands will be denied asylum without a fair chance.
Under MPP, thousands of adults and kids are homeless, traumatized, and vulnerable.
Virtually no one passes these interviews and is not sent back. So for many, why even bother?