Current:Home > ContactMigrants in Mexico have used CBP One app 64 million times to request entry into U.S. -Aspire Money Growth
Migrants in Mexico have used CBP One app 64 million times to request entry into U.S.
View
Date:2025-04-18 01:14:58
Migrants in Mexico have made more than 64.3 million requests to enter the U.S. using a smartphone app that the Biden administration has tried to establish as the main gateway to the American asylum system at the southern border, internal federal government documents obtained by CBS News show.
In the first year of the program's implementation, migrants used the phone app, known as CBP One, tens of millions of times to apply for a coveted appointment to be processed by U.S. immigration authorities at an official border crossing, according to the internal documents. So far, nearly 450,000 migrants have been allowed into the U.S. under the process, the documents show.
The documents cover a 13-month period between January 2023, when the Biden administration started allowing migrants to request appointments using CBP One, and Feb. 8, 2024. On average, migrants have made just under 5 million appointment requests per month.
The number of requests does not represent unique individuals, since the total includes repeated attempts by the same people. Nonetheless, the figure illustrates the extraordinarily high demand among migrants to come to the U.S. and the desperation that leads many to try again and again to secure a chance to enter the country.
"It's a staggering number," said Theresa Cardinal Brown, a former U.S. immigration official during the administrations of Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama. "There's a lot of people who would love to migrate to the United States. In essence, they see CBP One as sort of a self-petitioning mechanism that we've never had before."
A Biden effort to control migration
The Biden administration has sought to use the CBP One system to encourage migrants to refrain from crossing the border illegally in between ports of entry. Unlike those who enter the country unlawfully, migrants who secure a CBP One appointment can apply for a work permit after being released from U.S. custody and do not have to satisfy the stricter asylum conditions of a Biden administration regulation.
That rule presumes migrants are ineligible for asylum if they enter the U.S. unlawfully after failing to seek refuge in a third country, like Mexico, on their way to American soil.
As of Feb. 8, U.S. officials at ports of entry along the southern border had allowed 448,701 migrants with CBP One appointments to enter the country, giving them notices to appear in immigration court to plead their cases, according to the internal government documents.
While migrants who come to a port of entry with a CBP One appointment undergo national security and public safety checks, they are not screened for asylum. Instead, they are processed under the humanitarian parole authority, which allows them to work, and given a notice to appear in immigration court, where they can later ask for asylum. Those cases typically take years to be decided.
The top origin countries of those allowed into the U.S. under the program, the documents show, are Venezuela, Mexico, Haiti, Cuba, Honduras, Russia, El Salvador, Colombia, Chile and Guatemala.
The CBP One process is available in English, Spanish, Haitian Creole, Portuguese and Russian, and open to migrants from any country who are physically in central or northern Mexico. A geofencing feature is supposed to block anyone south of Mexico City from using the app.
Every morning, the U.S. government distributes 1,450 new CBP One appointments. Most of them are allocated randomly, while 30% of them are offered to migrants who have been waiting in Mexico the longest. Those who fail to get an appointment have to try again the next day.
A senior U.S. Customs and Border Protection official said the number of CBP One appointment requests is "high," but "not unreasonably high." Migrants are often making a new request each day until they get an appointment, according to the official, who requested anonymity to discuss the process.
"If somebody requests for five weeks straight before they get an appointment, that individual is showing up 35 times in that number," the senior CBP official told CBS News.
While the agency increased the daily number of CBP One spots several times last year, the official said there are no current plans to do so again. The official noted that together with dozens of humanitarian exemptions to the CBP One requirement, the U.S. is processing more than 1,500 migrants each day at ports of entry — four times the pre-pandemic level.
Mixed results with CBP One
The CBP One system is one of several programs the Biden administration has established to give migrants a legal and orderly way to come to the U.S., alongside an initiative that allows Americans to sponsor the entry of up to 30,000 Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans each month. Those processes have been paired with a rule that restricts asylum eligibility and expands deportations.
While the administration credited this "carrots and sticks" strategy for a two-year low in illegal border crossings in June 2023, migrant crossings in between ports of entry later spiked, reaching a quarter of a million in December, a record high.
The impact of the CBP One process has also varied widely by nationality. Illegal border crossings by Cubans and Haitians, two of the top nationalities using CBP One, have remained very low compared to 2022 and 2021. On the other hand, tens of thousands of migrants from Central America and Venezuela have continued to cross into the U.S. unlawfully each month, bypassing the CBP One system.
The senior CBP official attributed the disparate impact to the large diaspora communities that help migrants from Cuba and Haiti and provide them information about U.S. border policies.
Cardinal Brown, the former U.S. immigration official who now serves as a senior adviser at the Bipartisan Policy Center, said the CBP One system is "providing some order" at the border. But she said many migrants are also giving up waiting for appointments and crossing into the U.S. without authorization.
The incentive to wait for an appointment has been diluted by the fact that many migrants who enter the country illegally are still released with court notices. Due to insufficient detention facilities and asylum officers, the government has been releasing most migrants who cross the border illegally over the past several months, instead of screening them using the heightened asylum standards, government data show.
The number of CBP One appointments, Cardinal Brown added, is "clearly a drop in the bucket of this massive number of migrants moving in this hemisphere and trying to get to the United States."
Camilo Montoya-GalvezCamilo Montoya-Galvez is the immigration reporter at CBS News. Based in Washington, he covers immigration policy and politics.
TwitterveryGood! (1782)
Related
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- Greek prime minister says legislation allowing same-sex marriage will be presented soon
- Cummins to recall and repair 600,000 Ram vehicles in record $2 billion emissions settlement
- How Bill Belichick won six Super Bowl championships with the Patriots
- Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
- Ava DuVernay shows, 'Gentefied,' 'P-Valley' amongst most diverse on TV, USC reports
- Record 20 million Americans signed up for Affordable Care Act coverage for 2024
- Puppy Bowl assistant referee will miss calls. Give her a break, though, she's just a dog!
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Fantasia Barrino on her emotional journey back to 'Color Purple': 'I'm not the same woman'
Ranking
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Efforts to restrict transgender health care endure in 2024, with more adults targeted
- Jennifer Lawrence recalls 'stressful' wedding, asking Robert De Niro to 'go home'
- DJ Black Coffee injured in 'severe travel accident' while traveling to Argentina
- Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
- Why Golden Bachelor's Leslie Was Uncomfortable During Gerry and Theresa's Wedding
- Archeologists map lost cities in Ecuadorian Amazon, settlements that lasted 1,000 years
- Who should Alabama hire to replace Nick Saban? Start with Kalen DeBoer of Washington
Recommendation
Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
Live updates | UN top court hears genocide allegation as Israel focuses fighting in central Gaza
Todd and Julie Chrisley receive $1M settlement in 2019 lawsuit against tax official
Hundreds of manatees huddle together for warmth at Three Sisters Springs in Florida: Watch
Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
Every Browns starting quarterback since their NFL return in 1999
The Alabama job is open. What makes it one of college football's most intriguing?
Donald Trump’s civil fraud trial in New York heads to closing arguments, days before vote in Iowa