
‘The risk of going back is practically death': Haitian immigrants fear Trump's efforts to send them back to a country in crisis
Titi, who asked to be identified only by a pseudonym out of fear of being targeted by immigration authorities, came to the United States with her younger sister in 2024 after fleeing widespread gang violence in Haiti that made even routine activities, such as walking to a supermarket, dangerous.
The sisters entered the US using the CBP One app — a system launched in 2020 designed primarily for commercial truck drivers and other industry users and expanded in 2023 to allow asylum seekers to schedule appointments at the southern border before entering the country.
In November 2024, Titi and her sister applied for additional relief under Temporary Protected Status (TPS), which has allowed Haitian immigrants to live and work in the US since a massive earthquake struck Haiti in 2010. Titi said they are still awaiting a decision.
President Donald Trump's administration has since revoked the legal status of migrants who entered the country through CBP One, The Associated Press reported in April.
Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has sought to terminate TPS for Haitians on August 3, with an effective date of September 2.
'This decision restores integrity in our immigration system and ensures that Temporary Protected Status is actually temporary,' a DHS spokesperson said in June. 'The environmental situation in Haiti has improved enough that it is safe for Haitian citizens to return home.'
The Trump administration's efforts to end TPS for Haitian immigrants have left Titi and hundreds of thousands of others worried they may be forced to return to a country that isn't safe.
'There is no safety and security in Haiti right now,' Titi told CNN in her native Creole through a translator. 'Instead, I would say that the situation has gotten worse since I left.'
Earlier this month, a federal judge in Brooklyn blocked the Trump administration's attempt to rescind former President Joe Biden's 18-month extension of Haiti's TPS designation, which is set to end on February 3, 2026.
The federal judge ruled Noem 'does not have statutory or inherent authority to partially vacate a country's TPS designation.'
The legal fight over TPS comes as the Trump administration intensifies its crackdown on undocumented immigrants, conducting mass deportations and Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids across the country, including in farming fields and courthouses.
The administration has also moved to restrict other protections. CNN reported last month that Trump planned to dismiss asylum claims for hundreds of thousands of immigrants, making them deportable. The Justice Department has also called for the denaturalization of legal immigrants who commit violent crimes or 'pose a potential danger to national security.'
Haitian immigrant advocates welcomed the judge's ruling blocking the early end to TPS, but say they expect the administration to appeal.
'We are not out of the woods,' said Guerline Jozef, executive director of the nonprofit Haitian Bridge Alliance. 'We are not comfortable because we know of that possibility.'
Jozef said more than 500,000 Haitian immigrants are currently living in the US under TPS, and forcing their return to Haiti would put them in grave danger, as much of the country is controlled by armed militias. Gangs have seized at least 85% of Haiti's capital, Port-au-Prince.
More than 5,600 people were killed in Haiti in 2024, and one million were left homeless because of the gang violence, according to The Associated Press.
'The risk of going back is practically death,' Jozef said.
She believes the Trump administration's move to deport Haitian immigrants, despite listing the country under a Level 4 travel advisory, is a 'policy that is rooted in anti-Black racism and cruelty.'
This is a 'ridiculous and false claim,' said Abigail Jackson, a White House spokesperson, adding it 'demonstrates a lack of even the most basic understanding of Temporary Protected Status – which is by definition, temporary.'
Jackson said in a statement to CNN the 2010 earthquake, which allowed Haitians to receive TPS in the US, 'no longer poses a risk' to them. Haitian nationals, she said, can pursue legal status through other channels, such as asylum, if they are eligible.
'President Trump is keeping his promise to restore sanity to our immigration system and end the Biden Administration's exploitation of these temporary programs to encourage more illegal immigration,' Jackson said.
Tricia McLaughlin, assistant secretary for public affairs at the DHS, said Haiti's TPS 'was never intended to be a de facto asylum program, yet that's how previous administrations have used it for decades.'
The Department of State lists kidnapping, crime, terrorist activity, civil unrest and limited health care in Haiti as reasons for the travel advisory. 'Either Haiti is safe for everyone or it's not safe at all,' Jozef said.
In Springfield, Ohio — which drew national attention during last year's presidential campaign when Trump falsely claimed Haitian immigrants were eating pets — anxiety over the potential loss of TPS is widespread.
The community is home to about 15,000 Haitian immigrants, many of whom have TPS, said Carl Ruby, senior pastor of Central Christian Church.
Ruby said thousands of Haitian immigrants moved to Springfield after word spread that it was a welcoming community with housing and jobs for their families. Meat and clothing factories, as well as Amazon fulfillment centers, have been popular employers for Haitian immigrants, local activists say.
Ruby, who advocates for Haitian families, said there is a 'sense of limbo' in Springfield's Haitian community.
'They have bounced back and forth from being terrified to thinking it's going to be OK,' Ruby told CNN.
Ruby said many Haitian immigrants are scrambling to apply for asylum and set up guardianship for their US-born children in case the parents get deported. Others are considering moving to other countries such as Canada.
But returning to Haiti is not a safe option, Ruby said, adding that some families witnessed gruesome murders before fleeing the country. He also noted Haitians with certain chronic health conditions would not have access to life-saving medications in Haiti.
'Many Americans don't understand how serious the risk is,' Ruby said. 'I think there's a false impression that people come to the US because they want to benefit from our public services, but nothing could be further from the truth. They only came because their lives were in danger.'
Viles Dorsainvil, co-founder and executive director of the Haitian Support Center in Springfield, said his organization helps Haitian immigrants transition into the community by assisting with job searches, housing applications, setting up utilities and providing legal advice.
Haitian immigrants have made a positive impact on the local economy because most are dedicated workers in essential jobs, he said.
Now, he said, they are living with 'fear, anxiety and uncertainty' with ICE raids and arrests occurring across the country and the Trump administration seeks to end TPS early.
If the judge's ruling on the February end date for TPS stands without a successful appeal, Haitian migrants will have more time to make plans, Dorsainvil said. But if conditions in Haiti don't improve by next year, many immigrants will still face the same risks, he said.
'It should be a suicidal decision to go back to Haiti now,' Dorsainvil said. 'People living in Haiti now, they are not at peace.'
Meanwhile, Titi says she is desperate to stay in the US, which she believes is much safer for raising her unborn child.
Her sister was detained by ICE agents after an immigration court hearing in June and remains in custody, she said.
Titi, who was studying to be a nurse before leaving Haiti, wants to learn English so she can get a job and earn an income in the US.
She believes ICE hasn't come after her because she is pregnant. Once the baby is born, Titi said she doesn't know what she will do if there are no protections in place for Haitian immigrants.
'I have no escape plan,' Titi said. 'I don't have anywhere else to go.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Boston Globe
an hour ago
- Boston Globe
Dozens rally in Boston in support of immigrant TPS holders as Trump administration moves toward removing legal status
TPS holders from Sijan Shrestha, 29, of Brighton, moved to the US from Nepal as an international student in 2014, when he was able to attain TPS status after a devastating earthquake struck Nepal in 2015. 'I'm in the mercy of DHS,' she said in an interview. Advertisement Shrestha said he works in biotechnology and feels he has contributed to the US economy through his job and by paying taxes. 'You're not the same person as you were before you get punched in the head, and it's the same thing here,' Shrestha said, noting the difficulty of returning to Nepal, where he hasn't lived since he turned 18. Shrestha said he tried to obtain legal status through other options when he saw his TPS status was threatened, but he was not selected for a work visa in the H-1B lottery system. He now hopes to attend graduate school to stay in the US a couple more years. Advertisement 'For the longest time I chose not to speak about it, there were too many questions,' he said. 'It's been a learning process for me over the years as well.' At least 17,135 TPS holders live in Massachusetts, many with children who are US citizens, according to the Honduran and Nicaraguan nationals first received TPS status in 1999 during following the destruction brought on by Hurricane Mitch. In a statement, DHS said the program was never intended to last for over a quarter century, and the impact of the natural disaster on the Central American country no longer exists. Under federal law, individuals from certain countries who are already in the US can receive TPS. The designation is given during natural disasters, civil wars, or 'extraordinary and temporary conditions,' according to Individuals under the protected status are not removable during the duration of TPS, can receive work and travel authorization, and cannot be detained by DHS on the basis of immigration status. TPS holders from Haiti, one of the At the rally, attendees held signs in support of TPS holders displaying messages like, 'Immigrants make U.S. great.' Patricia Carbajal, 46, of Revere, said she arrived in Texas in 1998 from Honduras before eventually moving to Massachusetts with her family. After 26 years living and working in the US as a single mother, Carbajal said she is facing deportation in the next two months. Advertisement 'Our lives depend on the judge's decision,' Carbajal said in Spanish, referring to the lawsuit in San Francisco. Isabel Matute, 52, who was born in El Salvador and lives in Revere, has been in the US for more than 26 years. She said she used to be a TPS holder but is now awaiting her green card after marrying a U.S. citizen. 'One has to fight for those who can't,' Matute said in Spanish. Maria Probert can be reached at


Fox News
2 hours ago
- Fox News
Illegal who conspired to bludgeon teen to death with baseball bat among latest ICE roundups
An illegal alien convicted of a conspiracy to murder a teenager using a baseball bat in the Philadelphia area is among some of the "worst of the worst" criminal illegals arrested by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement across the country in recent weeks, according to the agency. A statement by ICE says that Bou Khathavong, an illegal alien and dual citizen of Laos and Thailand, was arrested on July 25 by officials from ICE Philadelphia. According to ICE, Khathavong has previously been convicted of conspiracy to murder a teenager with a baseball bat in in Pennnsylvania. Another statement by the Department of Homeland Security released on Tuesday highlighted other "worst of the worst" illegal aliens arrested in recent weeks, including several pedophiles, drug traffickers and individuals convicted of cruelty and neglect of a child and involvement in a hit-and-run that resulted in death. DHS said illegal alien Santiago Geovany Garcia-Rosales, a 35-year-old from Guatemala, was convicted of failure to stop and render aid involving a death in Harris County, Texas. He was arrested by ICE Houston on July 28, according to ICE. ICE also arrested Hector Bonaparte-Contreras, a 42-year-old criminal illegal alien from from Mexico, on July 24. Bonaparte-Contreras was convicted of predatory criminal sexual assault on a child less than 13 years old in Chicago. Another alien, Julio Armando Gomez-Fernandez, was arrested by ICE on July 27 in Dallas. Also an illegal from Mexico, Gomez-Fernandez was previously convicted in Colorado of meth possession with intent to distribute as well as unlawful re-entry. Manuel Loja, a criminal alien and sex offender from Ecuador, was arrested by ICE Newark on July 24. Loja has been convicted of cruelty and neglect of children in New Jersey. DHS pointed out in its release that 70% of ICE arrests include illegal aliens with either criminal convictions or pending charges. The statement said that "under the leadership of President Trump and Secretary Noem, DHS is delivering on its promise to prioritize the American people over illegal aliens and criminal protection policies, removing these public safety threats from American communities." DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin also commented on the arrests, blaming the Biden administration for having "allowed dangerous criminals to pour into our country." "President Trump and Secretary Noem unleashed ICE to arrest these criminal illegal aliens," said McLaughlin, adding, "From pedophiles to drug traffickers, ICE is prioritizing arresting the worst of the worst. We will not allow criminal illegals to terrorize American communities."


Newsweek
2 hours ago
- Newsweek
ICE Releases Marine Veteran's Wife from Custody After Trump Ally Request
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A Marine Corps veteran's wife has been released from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody following intervention by Sen. John Kennedy, a Louisiana Republican and a vocal supporter of President Donald Trump's immigration policies. Paola Clouatre, a Mexican national, had been detained by ICE since late May and was among tens of thousands of people held in detention as the Trump administration continued pushing for 3,000 immigration-related arrests each day. Her release this week came after a federal immigration judge halted her deportation order and Kennedy's office contacted the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to advocate on her behalf. By Monday, Paola was back home in Baton Rouge with her husband, Adrian Clouatre, and their two young children. Adrian Clouatre takes a selfie of himself and his wife Paola, on May 26, 2024, in Baton Rouge, La. Adrian Clouatre takes a selfie of himself and his wife Paola, on May 26, 2024, in Baton Rouge, La. Associated Press Emails reviewed by The Associated Press show Kennedy's office submitted a formal request to DHS on Friday, asking for Paola's release based on the judge's decision earlier in the week. On July 23, an immigration judge ruled to halt her deportation, and the following day, Kennedy's staff forwarded the ruling to DHS and ICE. Christy Tate, a constituent services representative for Kennedy, communicated with ICE throughout the process and kept the Clouatre family informed. In an email to Adrian Clouatre after Paola's release, Tate wrote, "I am so happy for you and your family. God is truly great!" Carey Holliday, the family's attorney, credited Kennedy's office as being "instrumental" in securing Paola's release by directly engaging with DHS. Though the senator's office declined to comment further, Tate's email correspondence detailed how she followed up persistently with ICE and shared court documentation to support the request. This case marks one of several recent examples where Louisiana lawmakers have stepped in to assist families facing deportation. House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, another Republican from Louisiana, recently intervened to help secure the release of an Iranian woman from ICE custody in New Orleans. Sen. Kennedy has largely backed President Trump's strict immigration agenda. On July 17, he posted on Facebook, "Illegal immigration is illegal — duh," as part of his continued support for ICE enforcement. Yet, he has occasionally criticized the administration's actions when errors have occurred, such as when a U.S. citizen was mistakenly deported earlier this year. In Paola Clouatre's case, the senator's office appeared to balance its hardline stance with a more compassionate, case-by-case approach to advocacy. Paola Clouatre had been detained since May 27, when she was taken into custody during an immigration appointment related to her green card application. She had entered the U.S. as a child alongside her mother more than a decade ago and had initially been processed legally while seeking asylum. However, her mother later failed to appear for a court hearing, and in 2018, a judge issued a deportation order against Paola—who by then had become estranged from her mother and was experiencing homelessness. Her legal status remained unresolved despite her marriage to a U.S. veteran and her efforts to comply with immigration procedures. The Department of Homeland Security previously told The AP it considered Clouatre to be "illegally" in the country but did not comment following her release. Adrian Clouatre said he was frustrated by the agency's actions. "It shouldn't just be like a blanket 'Oh, they're illegal, throw them in ICE detention,'" he said, urging officials to consider individual circumstances more carefully. The family's attorney noted that while Paola's immigration case is far from over, the halted deportation order gives them a strong chance of securing permanent residency in the future. Now home, Paola is wearing an ankle monitor but able to care for her children again. Reunited with her infant daughter and toddler son, she told the AP she finally feels like a mother again. "I was feeling bad," she said of her time in detention. "I was feeling like I failed my kids." Adrian says they're looking forward to resuming normal life—and picking up where they left off the day she was detained. "We're going to make that day up," he said, recalling their interrupted plan to enjoy beignets in New Orleans. This article includes reporting by the Associated Press.