Border Patrol agents interviewing families for 'credible fear,' instead of asylum officers
WASHINGTON - Border Patrol agents are beginning to screen migrant families for "credible fear" instead of highly trained asylum officers who are charged with determining whether applicants qualify for U.S. protection, the Los Angeles Times has learned.
The first Border Patrol agents arrived last week to start training at the South Texas Family Residential Center in Dilley, the nation's largest immigrant family detention center, according to lawyers working there and several employees at U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services.
The move expands the Trump administration's push for Border Patrol agents to take over the interviews that mark the first step in the lengthy asylum process. Border Patrol agents began training to conduct asylum interviews in late April, but agents have now deployed to family detention facilities for the first time.
As a result, Border Patrol agents - law enforcement personnel who
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