Migrants, who were temporarily allowed to live in the United States using an online application application, was said to leave the country “immediately”, they said on Monday. It was not clear how many beneficiaries would affect.
Over 900,000 people were allowed in the country using the CBP One application from January 2023. CBP One was the cornerstone of the Joe Biden administration strategy in the creation and expansion of legal paths to enter the USA, trying to discourage illegal border intersections or people arriving massively on the southern border on the southern border on the southern border on the southern border.
Persons accepted to the US through the application could generally remain in the country for two years with authorization to work under the presidential authority called conditional dismissal.
“The cancellation of these Parols is a promise that the American nation is in order to secure our borders and protect national security,” she said in response to the questions of the Internal Security Department.
The authorities confirmed notifications about the dissolution of the CBP solution to one beneficiaries, but they did not say how much. They were encouraged to slip -up with the same application that they introduced, which was renamed CBP Home.
“Time to give up the United States”, wrote the internal security department to the Honduran family, which entered the USA at the end of 2024. Press Associated Press reviewed the message e -mail received on Sunday.
Others made the same e -mail available on social media platforms.
More expansive use of deleted fines
Until the end of December, 936 500 people could come with CBP at meetings at the border with Mexico. President Donald Trump ended CBP one for new participants on the first day on his first day of the office, leaving thousands in Mexico who arranged at the beginning of February.
Internal security said on Monday that the use of conditional power by Biden – more than any president, since he was created in 1952 – “he additionally fueled the worst border crisis in US history.”
Meanwhile, the Trump administration plans a fine of migrants as part of the deportation orders up to USD 998 per day, if he does not leave the USA and take over his property if they do not pay, according to the documents checked by Reuters.
As long as lasting immigration raids and arrests in the USA, the press secretary of the White House said that the administration considers all undocumented migrants.
The Trump administration also considers the acquisition of the ownership of immigrants who do not pay a fine, in accordance with government e -mails checked by Reuters.
In response to Reuters's questions, a spokeswoman for the Internal Security Department (DHS), Tricia McLaughlin, she said in a statement that immigrants in the US should illegally use the explored CBP – currently known as CBP Home under Trump – to “leave the country”.
“If they don't, they will have to face the consequences,” said McLaughlin. “This covers a fine of USD 998 per day for each day when an illegal alien exaggerated the final order for deportation.” DHS warned of the fines in the social media post on March 31.
The fines result from the law of 1996, which was enforced for the first time in 2018, during the first term of Trump. He recalled the right to apply fines of hundreds of thousands of dollars against nine migrants looking for a sanctuary in churches. According to court files, the administration withdrew penalties, but then continued the smaller fines in the amount of approximately USD 60,000 per person in relation to at least four migrants.
President Biden stopped issuing fines and repealed related policies when he took office in 2021.
Scott Shuchart, the best official for immigration and customs policy (ICE) as part of Biden, said that migrants and their supporters can challenge fines in court, but the threat itself may have a chilling influence.
“They are not really about enforcing the law, it is to give fear in communities,” he said.
A group of immigration spokespersons FWD.US estimates that about 10 million migrants without legal status or temporary protection live with US citizens or permanent residents in the so -called “mixed status households”.