The initial blow came with the end of CBP One, stranding thousands of asylum seekers with and without appointments
Lee Gelernt with the ACLU said the action goes "way beyond anything that even President Trump has tried in the past."
Sheinbaum, with Interior Secretary Rosa Icela Rodríguez, guaranteed care for Mexican nationals deported from the U.S.
Oswaldo Rivas Migrantes en Mexicali enfrentan Futuro Incierto sin su Cita CBP
Following executive orders from President Donald Trump related to border security, a large number of troops will deploy to the border.
Hundreds of thousands of migrants lost scheduled appointments after CBP One app was disabled, creating uncertainty at the US-Mexico border.
Undocumented immigrants and their California families braced for the worst — and many told CalMatters they would go underground — as newly sworn-in President Donald Trump began issuing executive
The CBP One app that worked as recently as that morning would no longer be used to admit migrants after facilitating entry for nearly 1 million people since23.
A nurse who fled Cuba as part of the Caribbean nation’s largest exodus in more than six decades needed a place to stay in Mexico as she waited to legally enter the U.S. using a government app. A woman who had lived her whole life in the same Tijuana neighborhood was desperate for medical help after a dog attack left her with wounds to her legs.
Since its launch in 2023, over 900,000 appointments were facilitated by the CBP One app, but its closure has left thousands of migrants in limbo.
El primer golpe llegó con el fin de CBP One, dejando varados a miles de solicitantes de asilo con y sin citas.