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Supreme Court Rules Asylum Seekers May Be Turned Away at the Border

The 6–3 decision allowed a ’metering policy' developed by the Obama administration and continued in Trump’s first term.
Supreme Court Rules Asylum Seekers May Be Turned Away at the Border
Members of the Central American migrant caravan listen to Erika Pinheiro, litigation director for Al Otro Lado, instructing them on the U.S. asylum process at a municipal sports complex in Zone Norte near the U.S.-Mexico border in Tijuana on Nov. 19, 2018. Charlotte Cuthbertson/The Epoch Times
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The Supreme Court on June 25 ruled that the government can turn away asylum-seekers at the border, clarifying a law that requires immigrants to be inspected when they arrive in the United States.

“This case presents a straightforward question: whether an alien who seeks to enter the United States from Mexico ‘arrives in the United States’ when he or she is still in Mexico,” Justice Samuel Alito wrote on behalf of the majority.

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Stacy Robinson
Stacy Robinson
Author
Stacy Robinson is a politics reporter for the Epoch Times, occasionally covering cultural and human interest stories. Based out of Washington, D.C. he can be reached at [email protected]