Trump’s deportation bombshell exposed.

Trump’s latest move on immigration is causing shockwaves across the nation.
Biden’s immigration strategy detailed.

Biden’s app was introduced to streamline lawful border entries and discourage illegal crossings — and was hailed as a humane solution during Biden’s term.

The CBP One app was introduced in early 2023 as a high-tech answer to border chaos. It allowed migrants to request appointments at official ports of entry — legal, trackable, and efficient.

Families fleeing violence in Central America saw CBP One as the only safe and legal way to request asylum without crossing illegally.

Many of the beneficiaries began building lives — getting jobs, enrolling kids in schools, paying taxes — under the assumption they were following the rules.

CBP One allowed nearly a million people entry into the U.S. from Mexico, typically granting two-year stays and temporary work authorization.

By the end of last year, nearly a million had entered legally using CBP One — while many others waited months for a slot.

Opponents claimed it incentivized mass migration and created a backlog that would eventually blow up — which, in Trump’s eyes, it just did.

The DHS claims Biden abused his parole authority “more than any other president,” arguing it helped fuel “the worst border crisis in U.S. history.”
Trump’s shocking move after taking Oval Office clarified.

Within hours of retaking the Oval Office, Trump killed off new CBP One appointments, leaving thousands stranded at the border.

Migrants had used the app to safely schedule border appointments rather than risking life and limb crossing illegally or waiting in camps.

The Department said ending the program fulfills a campaign pledge “to secure our borders and protect national security.”

Ironically, the same app that welcomed migrants is now the one telling them to go — CBP Home is now their exit portal.
Trump’s deportation threat exposed.

Migrants who entered the U.S. through Biden’s CBP One app have just been told to pack up and leave “immediately,” under a sweeping new directive from Trump’s Department of Homeland Security.

The order affects hundreds of thousands who legally entered during Biden’s term using a digital scheduling tool meant to reduce illegal border crossings.

Since January 2023, over 900,000 migrants gained temporary entry via the CBP One app — a digital pass now repurposed and renamed under Trump’s new directive as “CBP Home.”

Those who don’t self-deport will be charged $998 per day under a rarely enforced 1996 law now dusted off and weaponized.
Potential of consequences highlighted.

In a chilling statement, DHS confirmed it began emailing termination notices to beneficiaries — without revealing how many were sent.

One Honduran family received a direct message: “It’s time for you to abandon the United States.”

A senior Trump insider said the fines could stretch back up to five years, hammering long-term stayers with jaw-dropping retroactive penalties.

Al Otro Lado, a legal advocacy group, confirmed revocation letters have poured in — with migrants across the country sharing the same dreaded message.

Officials said the Department of Justice’s asset forfeiture division may be used to seize property from migrants refusing to pay the fines.

The prior administration argued that financial penalties were ineffective and unnecessary. That’s now over.

Trump’s DHS says it will unleash the full power of the law — one many didn’t even realize still existed.

Edith Espinal Moreno, a Mexican woman taking refuge in an Ohio church, was hit with nearly half a million in fines before ICE eventually dropped the case.

Advocacy groups report panic among migrants — some of whom believed they had years left under parole.

This marks one of the most aggressive mass deportation moves in modern American history.
The fines are just the beginning.

Officials say the $998-a-day penalty could extend to the 1.6 million migrants with existing deportation orders.

One internal DHS email reveals plans to explore “civil asset seizures” for those refusing to pay up — a financial squeeze like no other.

A quiet post on March 31 hinted the fines were coming. Few took it seriously. Now, the hammer has dropped.

They can leave voluntarily. Or they can rack up fines and risk losing property, savings, and any future path to legal status.

The government’s message couldn’t be clearer — whether migrants came with appointments, permits, or paperwork, the clock has run out.