Report
Published on May 8, 2025
A new report from Human Rights First and Refugees International reveals systemic and grave human rights abuses by the Trump administration against asylum seekers in U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) custody. CBP agents routinely subjected asylum-seeking families and adults to cruel and inhumane conditions and unlawfully expelled, removed, and transferred them to third countries without so much as a fear screening.
In its first few months, the Trump administration has used a pattern of enforced disappearances to detain, remove, and expel countless asylum seekers, without any assessment of their asylum claims, in stark violation of U.S. law and international legal obligations. This includes people who reported fleeing persecution by the government due to their political opinion, religious persecution, anti-LGBTQ attacks, sexual violence, the murders of family members, death threats, and other harms. U.S. immigration officials detained many in abusive and inhumane conditions at the border, denied them legally required fear screenings, and refouled (returned) them to potential persecution in their home countries or unlawfully transferred them to third countries where they were subjected to human rights violations. Prior to being expelled or removed, some were pressured or forced to sign documents that in some cases they could not even see because they were shown a blank signature line on a screen. Some have family members, including spouses and children, living in the United States with pending asylum cases from whom they have now been separated.
The administration’s actions, in each of these cases, violated laws enacted by Congress to safeguard due process and provide for the fair adjudication of people’s requests for protection from persecution. The enforced disappearances of people seeking U.S. protection is part of a broader Trump administration effort to subvert and avoid due process and the checks and balances that are central to the U.S. Constitution. These accounts also starkly lay bare the multiple cruelties inflicted on migrants and people who seek protection from persecution, both in U.S. border custody and after their unlawful transfers to third countries.
Instead of protecting these families and adults from political, religious, and other persecution as required by U.S. and international law, U.S. officials whisked them away in an attempt to place them beyond U.S. law and courts, in some cases returned them to their countries of feared persecution and in other cases sent them to third countries where they were subjected to arbitrary detention. Like the Trump administration’s decision to send other asylum seekers and immigrants to a notorious Salvadoran prison, these are dehumanizing tactics routinely employed by repressive and autocratic regimes, rather than a country governed by the U.S. Constitution that should be a champion of human rights and the rule-based order.
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