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Mayorkas warns migrants about smugglers as Title 42 ends: ‘Do not believe their lies’

Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, second from left, speaks during a news conference in Washington.

Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas on Wednesday warned migrants about smugglers at the U.S.-Mexico border ahead of the Thursday expiration date for the pandemic-era immigration policy Title 42.

“Smugglers have long been hard at work spreading false information that the border will be open after May 11. It will not be. They are lying,” Mayorkas said at a press conference. 

“To people who are thinking of making their journey to our southern border, know this: The smugglers care only about profit, not people. They do not care about you or your well-being. Do not believe their lies.”

The secretary warned migrants not to risk their lives and funds “only to be removed from the United States if — if — and when you arrive here,” he said in a nod to the danger of the journey.

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has repeatedly stressed the expiration of Title 42 does not mean the border is open. 

The policy, which was framed by the Trump administration as a health order when it was rolled out, is ending on Thursday with the expiration of the national emergency declaration over the COVID-19 pandemic. Migrant processing will be returned to the system used under Title 8, which comes with stiffer consequences for irregular migration. 

An individual removed under Title 8 faces a minimum five-year bar on reentry to the U.S. and could be hit with criminal prosecution if they try again. 

DHS is rolling out a new rule that assumes those who don’t use lawful pathways into the U.S. are ineligible for asylum, allowing for the expulsion of migrants who do not “establish a reasonable fear of persecution or torture in the country of removal,” a move the department says is aimed at incentivizing the use of the lawful pathways. 

The new rule goes into effect as soon as Title 42 lifts just before midnight Thursday.

Mayorkas on Wednesday also said the administration is “surging personnel to the border” to support local law enforcement as states along the southern border ready for an expected surge of migrants when Title 42 lifts. The administration is also opening up regional processing centers to facilitate legal pathways in migrants’ home countries. 

DHS is also kick-starting a digital advertising campaign in Central America and South America “to counter the lies of the smugglers with accurate information about U.S. immigration laws,” Mayorkas said. 

The secretary stressed although “the smugglers control the migratory paths,” the U.S. is working to “cut the smugglers out” and “reach qualifying individuals where they are” to provide lawful pathways. 

“We urge migrants once again not to believe the smugglers who are lying to them solely to make a profit. We are building lawful pathways for you to come to the United States. Do not place your life and your life savings in the hands of ruthless organizations,” Mayorkas warned.