The Trump administration is ready to open a tent court on the border to help handle tens of thousands of cases of asylum seekers forced to wait in Mexico, with hearings held entirely by video conference.
The court, or "soft-sided" facility as U.S. officials call it, is scheduled to begin operations Monday in Laredo, Texas. Another is expected to open soon in Brownsville in the Rio Grande Valley, the busiest corridor for illegal crossings.
The administration introduced its "Remain in Mexico" policy in San Diego in January and later expanded it to El Paso, but hearings there are conducted inside large buildings with normal courtrooms, and the judge usually appears in person.
The Laredo court will manage as many as 300 cases a day, said Alberto Flores, port director for U.S. Customs and Border Protection, said during a tour for journalists on Tuesday.
More
We don't want you Hector. GO HOME !!!
ReplyDeleteFollow the money . The private companies that are awarded these projects on a NON-COMPETITIVE , single source basis. Look who they donate to
ReplyDelete10:47 get over it. Someone has to do it. Hillary is not available try following her money trail lol. You would end up committing Clinton suicide. That is when you are shot in the back of your skull while holding a brief case in one hand and a cup of coffee in the other. Hmmmmmmmmmm
ReplyDelete