Approval rates for asylum applications in the US have dropped dramatically in the run-up to Donald Trump’s second administration — as the President-elect has vowed to crack down on the migrant crisis.
An Ecuadorian woman named Fernanda came before Minnesota Immigration Judge Katherine L. Hansen, carrying her American-born baby in a blanket. "I don't know if you can grant me asylum," Fernanda said.
Approval rates for asylum seekers in the U.S. are dropping dramatically in the run-up to the second Trump administration, and it's become particularly difficult for Latin American immigrants to get ...
The Department of Homeland Security says the agency is reviewing all asylum cases approved under the Biden administration in wake of Wednesday's attack on National Guard members in Washington, D.C. A ...
SEATTLE — Refugee service providers and immigration attorneys in western Washington said they are seeing a rapid surge in fear and confusion after President Trump issued sweeping statements signaling ...
But the two migrants facing deportation had very different odds of winning asylum based on the judge alone. Hansen, a former district judge in Detroit, approved 60% of asylum cases in a five-year span ...