Detention, Due Process and Internal Barriers to
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Transcript Detention, Due Process and Internal Barriers to
Building a Human Rights
Model: Detention and Due
Process for US Asylum
Seekers
Mark Noferi
Center for Migration Studies
June 3, 2014
Overview
Overview: Current US Detention & DP
for Asylum Seekers
Human Rights Standards (UNHCR,
etc.)
Recommendations
Evidence Supporting Human Rights
Model: Can It Work?
US Asylum Procedures
Standard:
Summary Processes – Rising (75+%)
Affirmative applications (asylum interview)
Defensive applications (in-court
proceedings)
Expedited Removal: FY ‘12: 163K, 39%
Reinstatement of Removal: 149K, 36%
Administrative Removal: ~3%
No Appointed Lawyer
Summary Procedures:
Detention and DP
Expedited Removal:
Mand det pending “credible fear” int’v (~27 days)
Case-by-case parole, post-credible fear, if arrived
at port of entry (DHS ‘12: 80% paroled?)
But: 70% claiming credible fear arrived
between ports since ‘07 (USCIS ’13)
Reinstatement of Removal:
Mandatory detention
“Reasonable fear” interview:
Regs 10 days, avg 113 days (NIJC suit)
Detention Concerns
Retraumatizing detention
Indefinite detention
Persecuted arrive, jailed – shocked
Psychological trauma: hopelessness, PTSD
“Worse than prison” (Swedish detainees)
Abusive conditions
CBP: Las hielaras
ICE: “Civil” reforms in some facilities…
Asylum Claims:
Lost in Detention?
Increased credible fear claims, increased
detention, increased claims given up…
Mexico, El Sal, Honduras, Guatemala:
Highest increases: ‘13 credible fear claims
Most-represented among US detainees
(90%)
Higher rates of withdrawal/abandonment
(26% these 4 countries, 17% overall)
Asylum Claims:
Lost in Process?
While expedited removals increase…
2005: CBP mistakenly denying 15% of
credible fear referrals
Reports: Agents pressuring for withdrawal
“If you don’t sign, you’ll go someplace worse”
Post-credible fear denials on credibility
grounds, “adding detail,” etc.
Latin American asylum seekers:
“Hardest” cases in adjudicators’ eyes
Human Rights Framework:
Detention
UNHCR 2012 Detention Guidelines:
“Last resort,” with liberty “default”
Individual, reasonable, proportional, non-arbitrary
Detention for abscondment legitimate. But:
“Minimal periods” in detention, w/ strict time limits
Review: “Ideally” w/in 48 hrs
Conditions: “Humane,” dignified (i.e. avoid jails)
Human Rights Framework:
Due Process
Minimum procedural safeguards
Free legal assistance where provided to
“similarly situated” nationals
UNHCR: Access to legal counsel at “all
stages”
Accelerated procedures: Only where
“manifestly unfounded,” “clearly abusive”
Lack of papers alone not “manifestly unfounded”
Detention can’t be penalty for illegal entry
The Human Rights Model
Custody and supervision, not detention
Detention: Not presumed,
Shorter, and
More humane conditions, tailored
Due Process:
Legal Assistance
Expedited Removal: Oversight, changes
(refer seekers to asylum officer, pre-REAL
ID credibility standards for asylum seekers)
Recommendations:
Detention
Formal in-court proceedings
S. 744: Individualized assessment, bond hearings,
community supervision, conditions oversight
Time limits on detention?
Open facilities? NGO bail for detainees?
Summary Processes
Discretionary, not mandatory detention
Formalize parole guidance into regs
Parole between ports of entry
Shorten detention: Time limits, resources
CBP conditions, as well as ICE
Recommendations:
Due Process
Legal Representation & Assistance:
S. 744 but in expedited proceedings?
Assistance short of/addition to lawyers?
Benefits:
More accurate decisionmaking
Less detention
Credible fear: Lawyer involved at outset
Mitigates hopelessness, trauma
Do bond hrgs, review help w/o counsel?
Human Rights Model:
Can It Work?
Asylum Seekers:
Predisposed to comply…
If treated fairly upon arrival.
“Procedural Justice” – i.e. supervision and
assistance, rather than detention alone:
Likely fosters robust compliance…
Even with adverse deportation orders.
Evidence Supporting the
Human Rights Model
Qualitative:
Asylum seekers want to follow the law,
trust process as fair, avoid detention
Compliance if process seen “fair”:
Early, reliable legal advice (most important)
Suitable living conditions
Holistic life support
Quantitative:
Vera, 2000: 93% supervised appeared, vs.
78% detained but released
Evidence Supporting the
Human Rights Model
BUT:
If Govt starts with detention, adversarial
stance to immigrant…
Immigrant more likely not to comply later.
More Research Needed
Does “procedural justice” apply to
noncitizens, w/ less no ties to community?
Predicting flight, public safety risk:
Asylum seekers w/ only shirt on back?
Which factors?
How much supervision?
Declined asylum seekers, post-order?
Quantitative research (since Vera, 2000)