NOGALES, Sonora 鈥 The day before Mexican nationals Dav铆d, his wife Xaltipa and their 13-year-old daughter got permission to request asylum in the U.S., using the CBP One mobile app, the family had given up hope.
For the past eight months they鈥檇 been living at Casa de la Misericordia, a migrant shelter in Nogales, Sonora, checking the CBP One app each morning with growing despair. They watched as the app鈥檚 lottery system gave appointments to other residents at the shelter, seemingly at random.
Of the tens of thousands of would-be asylum seekers waiting south of the U.S.-Mexico border, Dav铆d said they knew they were among the lucky ones with a place in a shelter and WiFi access that allowed them to use the mobile app, which the Biden administration says is the only legitimate way for most migrants to enter the U.S. to request asylum.
But as the months passed, their frustration grew, and their fear of the dangers they鈥檇 escaped in their home state of Puebla still lingered.
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鈥淚t was desperation. Eight months waiting isn鈥檛 easy,鈥 Dav铆d said last week, speaking in Spanish. The 蜜柚直播 is not using his or his wife鈥檚 full name, due to their vulnerability.
So in early May, the family left the shelter and spent the night sleeping on the ground in front of the pedestrian border crossing in Nogales, Sonora, hoping to soon get one of the occasional daily walk-up appointments offered to waiting migrants, when port staffing resources allow it.
The next morning, waking up on the street and looking for a place to use the bathroom, they discovered they had just received a CBP One appointment for the end of May.
鈥淲e all started crying,鈥 Dav铆d said, back at Casa de la Misericordia shelter. 鈥淲e鈥檇 been here the longest of anyone.鈥
Advocates say extended waits, often in dangerous conditions, are common for asylum seekers waiting south of the U.S.-Mexico border, in hopes of accessing the asylum system in the recommended way.
One year into the Biden administration鈥檚 鈥淐ircumvention of Lawful Pathways鈥 asylum rule, human-rights advocates say the rule wrongly restricts access to asylum and has returned people with legitimate fears to their country of persecution 鈥 not based on the merits of their case, but because they didn鈥檛 use CBP One to enter the U.S.

Casa de la Misericordia shelter director Alma Ang茅lica Mac铆as Mej铆a is called 鈥淪ister Lika鈥 or 鈥淢other鈥 by most of her guests, even though she hasn鈥檛 been a nun in years. Mac铆as Mej铆a says her shelter can house about 120 residents and most have been referred from other organizations as particularly vulnerable and in need of safety. Hers is the only shelter in Nogales, Sonora that allows guests to stay long-term, and many of the asylum seekers at Casa de la Misericordia have been waiting for months for an appointment through the problematic CBP One application.
It is legal to request asylum once on U.S. soil, regardless of how one entered the country. But the rule imposes penalties, such as a five-year ban on re-entry and presumed ineligibility for asylum, for most asylum seekers who enter without a CBP One appointment. The rule is still in effect as the Biden administration appeals a July 2023 federal district court ruling that found it unlawful.
The Biden administration hopes this 鈥渃arrot-and-stick鈥 approach deters asylum seekers from entering the U.S. illegally between ports of entry. More than 591,000 people have entered the U.S. using the app since it was first launched in January 2023, U.S. Customs and Border Protection says.
鈥淪cheduling appointments makes the process safer and more orderly, and the advance information that is submitted to CBP officers creates a more efficient and streamlined process for CBP and for individuals,鈥 according to a CBP fact sheet.
Advocates say asylum seekers trying to use the mobile app face ever-growing wait times in violent conditions south of the border, where criminal groups and Mexican authorities prey on migrants.
Accounts of kidnapping, extortion, torture, rape and robbery have exploded, said Christina Asencio, the 蜜柚直播-based director of research and analysis for refugee protection with Human Rights First. The advocacy group issued a report this month, 鈥,鈥 based on interviews with 500 asylum seekers south of the U.S. border.
Asylum seekers using the app are now targeted by criminals who threaten to delete their accounts or make them miss their appointments if they don鈥檛 pay, Asencio said.
鈥淲e and other groups have documented that cartels and transnational organized crime groups are specifically targeting people who have CBP One appointments, because of the belief that they鈥檒l be more inclined to pay a ransom quickly,鈥 she said.
Asencio interviewed victims of torture, whose teeth and fingers had been removed to compel their families to pay up, she said.
鈥淚 can鈥檛 begin to convey the risks involved with remaining and being stranded in Mexico,鈥 she said.
Those dangers drive some asylum seekers to cross the border between ports of entry out of desperation, fueling a chaotic situation at the southern border, rather than alleviating it, Asencio said.
鈥淭his is what鈥檚 driving people to cross between ports of entry,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 intentional policies that restrict rather than maximize entries at ports of entry.鈥

Most of the residents at Casa de la Misericordia in Nogales, Sonora are children or members of family groups. Many of the shelter鈥檚 residents live there for months as they wait for an appointment through the CBP One application, which the Biden Administration says is the only legitimate way for most asylum seekers to schedule a time to request asylum in the U.S.
The number of daily appointments offered through CBP One has been 鈥渟tagnant鈥 at 1,450 since last summer, and the technology required to use the application 鈥 a smart phone with enough data to use the app, a place to charge the phone and daily access to WiFi 鈥 is an impossible barrier for many, she said.
The DeConcini port in Nogales is the only one that accepts CBP One appointments in the 700 miles between Calexico, California, and El Paso, Texas, and it only accepts 100 appointments a day.
Police can鈥檛 help, migrants say
At Casa de la Misericordia migrant shelter earlier this month, Dav铆d and Xaltipa paged through the handwritten statement they planned to present to U.S. asylum officers.
Last fall, the couple and their daughter fled their hometown in the night after a local criminal family 鈥 with roots in the notoriously brutal but now splintered Los Zetas cartel 鈥 began systematically interrogating men in their community about an attack on one of their own.
After a five-hour violent interrogation, Dav铆d convinced his captors he wasn鈥檛 involved by showing them photos on his phone proving he was in another state at the time of the attack. He was released, but the criminals installed security cameras on his street and warned him not to leave, even for his work as a taxi driver.

Dav铆d and Xaltipa of Puebla, in south-central Mexico, share details from the declaration statement they鈥檙e preparing for their asylum request. The statement describes the organized crime in their community, and the violent interrogation Dav铆d underwent after gang members were convinced he鈥檇 been part of an attack on one of his neighbors. After waiting for eight months, most of it at the Casa de la Misericordia migrant shelter in Nogales, Sonora, the couple and their 13-year-old daughter finally received an appointment this month through the CBP One application to request asylum in the U.S. The Star is not using their full names because the couple says they won鈥檛 feel safe until they鈥檙e in the U.S.
The interrogations continued. When another neighbor was not only beaten, but killed, Dav铆d and his family decided they had to go, they said. They fled in the night to stay with family in the neighboring state of Morelos, until Dav铆d received a threatening text with a photo of the exterior of the house they were in. When he tried to make a report to authorities, they advised him to leave the country because the criminal family pursuing him had a presence throughout Mexico.
Their story is not unusual, said Alma Ang茅lica Mac铆as Mej铆a, director of Casa de la Misericordia shelter. It鈥檚 the only shelter in Nogales, Sonora that allows asylum seekers to stay long-term, until they receive a CBP One appointment. Most other shelters can only house migrants for three to 10 days, she said.
Between 70% and 80% of the 120 residents at Casa de la Misericordia are from Mexico, where organized crime and armed violence are widespread, and the rest hail from all over the world, including Central and South American countries, Senegal, Iran, China and Russia, she said.
The shelter sits atop a high hill and catches cool breezes even on a hot day, Mac铆as Mej铆a says. Walking the shelter grounds, children run up to Mac铆as Mej铆a to embrace her, or joke with her. Most residents call her 鈥淢other鈥 or 鈥淪ister Lika,鈥 even though she hasn鈥檛 been a nun since 2011.
Residents of Casa de la Misericordia have often been referred by other shelters or aid groups as particularly vulnerable, like Colombian nationals Daniel and Carolina.

Colombian nationals Daniel and Carolina say they were kidnapped in Mexico and only escaped by jumping from a moving train and walking for days through the desert in north-central Sonora. The 蜜柚直播 is not using their full names or showing their faces because they still fear their kidnappers could be pursuing them. They鈥檝e been waiting two months for an appointment to request asylum through the CBP One application, which the Biden administration says is the only legitimate way for most migrants to seek asylum in the U.S.
Following a traumatic journey through Mexico, the couple has been waiting two months at Casa de la Misericordia, with their 8-year-old son and Carolina鈥檚 11-year-old sister, in hopes of securing a CBP One appointment.
In Empalme, Sonora, the family says they were among about 20 migrants kidnapped by heavily armed men and put on a train to Nogales, Sonora. They overheard they鈥檇 been sold to another criminal group at the border. On the train, rumors swirled that their captors would demand $10,000 from their families and torture their hostages until their families paid.
The family decided to take their chances in the desert, jumping together from the train as it slowed in Benjamin Hill, Sonora. They walked for days, riding a cargo train for part of their journey, until they reached a migrant shelter in Altar. But when they learned their kidnappers were searching for them there, a priest from the local parish hid them under blankets in his car and drove them to Casa de la Misericordia, the couple said.
鈥淭hese are things I never expected to experience,鈥 Daniel said. 鈥淭hings I hope never to experience again, things that are harder when you have a child you want the best for.鈥
The Star is using only their middle names, and not showing their faces, because they don鈥檛 know whether their kidnappers are still pursuing them.
Access to ports restricted
Some migrants who are unaware of the CBP One app, or unable to use it, try their luck waiting for a chance to walk up to a U.S. port of entry and request asylum. But access to the ports is strictly limited for asylum seekers and even if they get through, most will face a higher burden of proof to get asylum because they didn鈥檛 use CBP One.
On a recent May afternoon, dozens sat outside the pedestrian crossing at the DeConcini port of entry, amid loud ongoing construction.
Among them were Fernando V谩zquez, his wife and two daughters: a 4-month-old baby and 3-year-old toddler. Snuggled together on the ground, V谩zquez said they were fleeing cartel violence in Guerrero, in southwest Mexico.
They鈥檇 heard the CBP One app takes too long, so they decided to camp out at the port of entry, where the nights have been cold and the days hot, V谩zquez said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 exhausting for the kids,鈥 he said in Spanish.

Alma Ang茅lica Mac铆as Mej铆a, director of Casa de la Misericordia migrant shelter in Nogales, Sonora, holds a 6-month-old girl named Natanael, who was born at the shelter two months after her pregnant mother arrived there from Guerrero seeking refuge. The woman had already been waiting two months for a CBP One application appointment but once she gave birth, she had to restart the process to include her daughter, Mac铆as Mej铆a said. Mac铆as Mej铆a says the asylum seekers at her shelter are often fleeing life-threatening situations and continue to fear for their lives even while at the shelter.
A CBP spokesman said there is no set number for how many walk-up asylum seekers can be processed daily; it depends on resources available and port traffic.
Limits on when migrants can approach ports of entry amounts to de-facto 鈥渄igital metering,鈥 according to a from Human Rights Watch.
The practice of metering 鈥 blocking undocumented people from accessing ports to request asylum 鈥 arose under the Trump administration to address an 鈥渦nprecedented鈥 rise in asylum requests and overcrowding at ports, the Congressional Research Service said in a .
But, the brief said, 鈥渢he policy had led to long wait times and overcrowded conditions on the Mexican side of the border, and arguably incentivized attempts to illegally cross the border between ports of entry.鈥
In 2021, a federal district court ruled that metering infringed on migrants鈥 constitutional right to due process. CBP the policy in November 2021.
But continued restrictions have invited exploitation. Nogales, Sonora officials had been charging migrants a fee to get on a wait list determining who can wait in the line at the DeConcini port, Mac铆as Mej铆a said.
The problem was one of the first issues tackled by a new coalition of Nogales, Sonora migrant shelters, including Kino Border Initiative, Casa de la Misericordia and the San Juan Bosco shelter. The coalition has been meeting since February, with the support of the Mexican Consulate in Nogales, 蜜柚直播, to improve shelters鈥 coordination and address concerns about risks facing migrants, Mac铆as Mej铆a said.
After learning about the wait list, Mexican consul general Marcos Moreno B谩ez said his Nogales, 蜜柚直播 office contacted local leaders in Nogales, Sonora. Within a day, the person who had been managing the wait list 鈥 and either directing or allowing the solicitation of bribes 鈥 was removed, Moreno B谩ez told the Star.
鈥淲e鈥檙e telling them, we know for a fact this is going on. Just help us to solve the problem,鈥 he said. 鈥淔rom one day to another there was a change.鈥
It鈥檚 a crucial step, but follow-up is necessary, said Pedro De Velasco, director of education and advocacy for Kino Border Initiative, a binational migrant-aid nonprofit.
鈥淭his won鈥檛 solve the issues unless we do something about this lack of transparency and lack of accountability,鈥 he said. At the coalition鈥檚 next meeting, Nogales, Sonora officials are supposed to give the consulate access to the wait list, and weekly reports on the number of people added to it and how many have entered the U.S.
Mexico鈥檚 enforcement leads to abuses
Since December, Mexico鈥檚 aggressive efforts to slow migrant arrivals at the U.S.-Mexico border have resulted in a听surge in abuse reports听and family separations, as migrants are forcibly relocated to southern Mexico, advocates say.
That鈥檚 contributed to a drop in migrant arrests at the border, particularly in the 蜜柚直播 sector, which in April 鈥 for the first time since July 鈥 was no longer the busiest of the nine southern border sectors, with 31,219 apprehensions between ports of entry. The San Diego sector became the busiest with more than 37,000 apprehensions.
So far in May, Border Patrol arrests along the entire southern border are down by more than half, compared to a December peak of 8,000 average daily arrests, CBS 蜜柚直播 reported.
With more highway checkpoints and limits on bus access for people perceived to be migrants, the Mexican National Guard and immigration officials have made it difficult to cross the state of Sonora, Mac铆as Mej铆a said.
Organized crime groups now routinely charge migrants, not even to get across the U.S.-Mexico border, but just to get through Mexico, she said.
鈥淥nly the cartels are the ones that manage to make it,鈥 she said.
Even asylum seekers trying to use CBP One have been removed to southern Mexico, where CBP One isn鈥檛 accessible.
Mac铆as Mej铆a recently hosted a family from China, who stayed at Casa de la Misericordia for seven months waiting for a CBP One appointment. Before arriving at the shelter, the mother and her children were separated from their father in Hermosillo, Sonora, after immigration officials detained him and flew him south to Chiapas. He got himself back to Mexico City鈥檚 airport but was returned to Chiapas again, even after his family secured a CBP One appointment, Mac铆as Mej铆a said.

Asylum seekers at Casa de la Misericordia migrant shelter in Nogales, Sonora, can wait up to eight months for an appointment through the CBP One application. Residents there are allowed to stay indefinitely, and they become like family to one another, says shelter director Alma Ang茅lica Mac铆as Mej铆a, known as 鈥淪ister Lika鈥 to most residents at the shelter.
Immigration officials in Mexico City only allowed the man to continue north after Mac铆as Mej铆a, with help from the International Red Cross and Mexico City aid groups, contacted officials to explain the man was allowed to enter the U.S., Mac铆as Mej铆a said.
Proposals focused on enforcement
A major shift has occurred at the border over the past year, as large numbers of migrants enter the U.S. between ports of entry 鈥 through gaps in the border wall or holes cut by smugglers using hand-held power tools 鈥 and surrender to border agents.
Agents are now devoting much of their time to processing asylum seekers, rather than their primary mission of searching for migrants trying to evade detection, Border Patrol鈥檚 蜜柚直播 sector chief John Modlin has told the Star.
Immigration experts say Congress should boost resources to receive more asylum seekers at ports of entry, and better resource the U.S. immigration court system so it can get through more cases, but most proposals have focused on enforcement.
Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, policy director at immigrant-rights group American Immigration Council, said that, for all the criticism of CBP One, the Biden administration has 鈥渕assively expanded鈥 access to protection in the U.S., including through new humanitarian parole programs.
The bipartisan Senate border-security bill 鈥 which U.S. senators, , declined to put to a vote on Thursday 鈥 would have funded 4,000 additional asylum officers and $440 million in funding for the immigration court system, Reichlin-Melnick said.
Today, due to the lack of asylum officers, only about 15% of migrants arriving between ports of entry and surrendering to agents are undergoing credible-fear screenings, intended to weed out those without a potential asylum claim, he said.
Most are released with a notice-to-appear in court years from now, due to a massive backlog in immigration courts, he said.
Those who didn鈥檛 use CBP One, or who don鈥檛 fit into a narrow group of exceptions, will ultimately be denied asylum. But the years-long delay means the punitive impact of the Biden鈥檚 asylum rule won鈥檛 be felt for years, he said.
Most asylum claims ruled valid
Over the last decade, two-thirds of the more than 1 million asylum cases decided by immigration judges were approved, despite the high burden of proof facing asylum seekers, said Austin Kocher, research assistant professor with Syracuse University鈥檚 Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, which uses public records to study the federal government.
Blaming migrants for bottlenecks in the U.S. system is missing the point, Kocher said.
鈥淚f there鈥檚 a line out the door at the emergency room, it鈥檚 not people鈥檚 fault that they鈥檙e waiting in line,鈥 Kocher said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a problem with the capacity of the emergency room.鈥
Critics suggest migrants surrendering to border agents often don鈥檛 have real asylum claims and just want to work in the U.S.
鈥淲e don鈥檛 have really good data on identifying that,鈥 Kocher said. 鈥淗aving researched this for 15 years now, I鈥檝e hardly met a person who was trying to apply for asylum who doesn鈥檛 have an intentional, legitimate claim to asylum, whether or not they鈥檒l qualify.鈥
Kocher said the broader question is why someone would try to use the asylum system to seek work.
鈥淲hy aren鈥檛 they getting work visas? The answer is, we haven鈥檛 raised our caps on work visas in decades, since the 1960s,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e restricted those caps to artificially low amounts, making it almost impossible for people to come (to work). 鈥 That鈥檚 a problem we created ourselves.鈥
A week before Dav铆d and Xaltipa鈥檚 CBP One appointment, Xaltipa was having recurring nightmares. She recently learned her sister and niece in Puebla had fled into the countryside after being threatened by the criminal gang in their town. They haven鈥檛 been heard from since.
Xaltipa tries to focus on her own daughter, hoping she鈥檒l be able to attend school safely if they get to stay in the U.S.
Back in Puebla, 鈥淚鈥檓 not at peace in my own house, wondering when she鈥檒l be home, if she鈥檒l be home,鈥 Xaltipa said tearfully. 鈥淚 want a better life for her, that she is free, that she doesn鈥檛 fear going out. 鈥 If they let us pass, thank God. And if not, we don鈥檛 know what鈥檚 going to happen to us.鈥
Emily Bregel is the 蜜柚直播鈥檚 border reporter. She started with an internship at the Baltimore Sun that launched her journalism career. Her first job out of college was at the Chattanooga Times Free Press and said she learned all about journalism from mentors and the newsroom. David and Emily discuss how local border reporting is important and different from the national angle, they discuss future projects and adventures Emily has had while on the job.
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