On May 13th, 2023, the U.S. Immigration Policy Center (USIPC) at UC San
Diego interviewed asylum seekers detained by Border Patrol (BP) in the
Jacumba desert. Over 1,000 people seeking asylum and refuge from nearly
every part of the world were held in three makeshift encampments on the
U.S. side of the U.S.-Mexico border without adequate food, water, or shelter.
Under the hot desert sun, the USIPC donated supplies and joined volunteers
as they brought food, baby food, water, hygiene kits, clothes, blankets,
diapers, and other supplies to these migrants. Using stratified random
sampling during aid distribution in Camp 2, USIPC conducted fifteen
structured interviews with asylum seekers. With approximately 150 people in
Camp 2, these interviews represent a 10 percent sample. These data make
clear that despite assertions by Border Patrol that the migrants were not
being detained, they were surrounded by Border Patrol agents and would be
apprehended if they tried to leave. This is consequential because those in
Border Patrol custody, according to the U.S. Customs and Border Protection
(CBP) National Standards on Transport, Escort, Detention, and Search (TEDS),
are entitled to basic humane treatment. The asylum seekers that we
interviewed were only given one water bottle each day in the morning, were
not given any food, were not given any shelter to protect themselves from the
sun, and were not given blankets to keep themselves warm at night. Lastly,
the data show that those seeking asylum have been ignored by Border Patrol
agents, have been unable to formally request asylum, and have been denied
due process.
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