Homeland security to reevaluate Joe Biden asylum cases
- DHS
to reevaluate Biden-era asylum cases. - Targets
suspended border asylum claims. - Implements
stricter eligibility and fees.
DHS spokesperson Tricia Mclaughlin stated in a statement
that the government had stopped processing immigration requests for Afghan
nationals
“indefinitely pending further review of security and vetting
protocols.”
On November 26, the US Citizenship and Immigration Services
stated that all immigration applications for Afghan nationals will be paused.
“The Trump Administration is also reviewing all
asylum cases approved under the Biden Administration, which failed to vet these
applicants on a massive scale,”
Mclaughlin said, according to Reuters.
The suspect in the case, Rahmanullah Lakanwal, 29, arrived
in the United States from Afghanistan in 2021 as part of a Biden-era program
for Afghans working with the American military.
However, many news sites, including
CBS, ABC, and Fox News, reported on Thursday that the Trump administration
awarded Lakanwal asylum in April.
What rights do affected asylum seekers have during
reprocessing?
Affected shelter campaigners under the DHS review of Biden-
period blessings retain core due process rights, including notice of the
review, occasion to submit substantiation or attendee-interviews, and access to
legal representation at their own expenditure. They can not be removed without
a final adverse decision and have the right to challenge denials through
immigration court prayers or movements to renew, potentially delaying
expatriation.
Work authorization and benefits remain valid during
reclaiming unless abandoned for security reasons, with protection against
arbitrary detention detention requires personalized defense and druthers like
supervised release are prioritized.
Limitations leave no government-handed counsel, eventuality
pauses in green card processing, and expedited timelines could limit
medication; consult immigration attorneys or nonprofits like the ACLU for
case-specific guidance.