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Federal appeals court pauses order requiring Biden administration to stop expelling migrant families

<i>Sandy Huffaker/AFP/Getty Images</i><br/>View of the US-Mexico border wall in Otay Mesa
AFP via Getty Images
Sandy Huffaker/AFP/Getty Images
View of the US-Mexico border wall in Otay Mesa

By Priscilla Alvarez and Tierney Sneed, CNN

The US Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit put on hold Thursday a lower court order that would have forced the Biden administration to stop expelling migrant families with children at the border under a public health authority linked to the pandemic.

The Biden administration can continue to expel migrant families with children while the case moves forward.

“We are disappointed in the ruling but it is just an initial step in the appellate litigation, and nothing stops the Biden administration from immediately repealing this horrific Trump-era policy,” said Lee Gelernt, ACLU lead attorney in the litigation, in a statement.

The public health authority, known as Title 42, was invoked at the onset of the coronavirus pandemic and has been criticized by immigrant advocates, attorneys and health experts who argue it has no health basis and puts migrants in harm’s way.

The Biden administration had been bracing for a decision from an appeals court on whether migrant families can be subject to Title 42. Earlier in September, a federal judge in DC blocked the administration from expelling families under the order — a major defeat for the administration. But the court gave the administration 14 days to prepare before it took effect. That deadline was Thursday.

The Justice Department appealed and warned of a surge of migrants at the US-Mexico border in the event that families can’t be expelled, saying border facilities are not equipped to handle an influx amid a pandemic.

Since the authority was implemented, more than 958,000 migrants have been swiftly expelled at the US southern border.

In the ruling earlier this month, the federal judge held that there are enough measures that can be taken to mitigate the spread of Covid-19. “In view of the wide availability of testing, vaccines, and other minimization measures, the Court is not convinced that the transmission of COVID-19 during border processing cannot be significantly mitigated,” the ruling stated.

This story has been updated with background information.

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