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FBI team arrives in Cuba to investigate fatal shooting of US-flagged speedboat

HAVANA (AP) — FBI agents have arrived inCubato investigatethe fatal shootingof five men aboard a U.S.-flagged speedboat in February that the Cuban government said was carrying suspects who were trying to infiltrate the island.

Associated Press

Five other men on the boat were wounded inan exchange of firewith the Cuban Border Patrol on Feb. 25 in what the Cuban government has called a terrorist attack by Cuban expatriates who had been living in the United States. The U.S. government has disavowed any connection to the group, and said it wants to fully investigate Cuba's claims.

The FBI technical team arrived Tuesday to conduct a thorough and independent investigation, a U.S. diplomatic official who is close to the matter told The Associated Press on Thursday. The official, who spoke on condition they not be named because they were not authorized to speak publicly about the matter, did not provide details on how many FBI agents arrived or how long they would remain on the island.

Cuban PresidentMiguel Díaz-Canelhad said in March that he expected FBI agents to visit the island to help with the investigation.

Cuban officials have said thespeedboat was detectedwith 10 men and military equipment aboard in waters north of the island. They said the men in the boat fired first and that soldiers returned fire, killing four suspects. A fifth later died from his injuries. Six other men were wounded, including a crew member in the Cuban military vessel.

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The survivorsface criminal terrorism chargesthat could carry a life sentence.

The clash occurred amidheightened tensionsbetween Cuba and the United States.

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said at the time that the group was not a U.S. government operation, and said U.S. officials would seek to verify the information provided by Cuban authorities.

Days after the shooting, high-ranking officials from Cuba's Interior Ministry and the Revolutionary Armed Forces displayed military equipmentseized from the speedboatand confirmed they had been in contact with the U.S. Coast Guard.

The equipment included high-caliber rifles, pistols, uniforms, boots, helmets, special rations, an electric generator, a satellite communications unit and at least 12,000 rounds of ammunition.

FBI team arrives in Cuba to investigate fatal shooting of US-flagged speedboat

HAVANA (AP) — FBI agents have arrived inCubato investigatethe fatal shootingof five men aboard a U.S.-flagged speedboat i...
Melissa Gilbert Defends Timothy Busfield in New Interview, Calls His Arrest 'Most Traumatizing Experience of Our Lives'

PEOPLE has an exclusive preview of Melissa Gilbert's sit-down interview with ABC's George Stephanopoulos about her husband Timothy Busfield's arrest on child sex abuse allegations

People

NEED TO KNOW

  • In the preview, Gilbert defends Busfield, calling the allegations against him "traumatizing" and maintaining his innocence

  • Busfield faces four felony charges of criminal sexual contact with minors and has pleaded not guilty to all counts

Melissa Gilbertis standing firm in her support for husbandTimothy Busfieldamid his legal troubles.

For the first time since Busfield, 68, was arrested on allegations of child sexual abuse in January, theLittle House on the Prairiealum, 61, sits down for an interview withGood Morning America'sGeorge Stephanopoulos.

PEOPLE has an exclusive first look at the conversation, which is set to air in full on Monday, April 6.

Melissa Gilbert sits down with George Stephanopoulos on 'Good Morning America'Credit: Good Morning America/Youtube

A representative for Gilbert told PEOPLE that the actress and Busfield's lawyer Larry Stein, wanted to speak with Stephanopoulos because she "decided it was time to sit down to clarify the facts of the case, which seem to have become lost to distraction, selective information and click bait."

"What has this whole episode been like for you?" Stephanopoulos asks Gilbert, who replies, "Hell. This has been the most traumatizing experience of our lives."

"Our life as we knew it is done," she says. "We are grieving what we had — all of our plans, all of our dreams, all of our ideas, all of our projects. For Tim, it's done. He's canceled. Even if he's exonerated, he will always be that guy. [He's] the last person in the world who would hurt a child. And believe me, if I thought for a second that Tim Busfield hurt a child, he'd have a lot more to worry about than prison."

Melissa Gilbert sits down with George Stephanopoulos on 'Good Morning America'Credit: Good Morning America/Youtube

On Jan. 9, the Albuquerque Police Department issued a warrant for Busfeild's arrest, alleging that heengaged in unlawful sexual conduct with two 11-year-old boys, whom he met on the set of Fox'sThe Cleaning Ladywhen they were child actors and he served as a director. Hesurrendered to policeon Jan. 13.

A week later, hewas released from custody with conditions while he awaits trial. When the judge ruled for his release at the Jan. 20 pretrial detention hearing, Gilbert could beseen crying from the viewing area of the courtroom and whispering, "Thank you, God."

Ahead of that hearing, Gilbert was one of 75 people whowrote letters of supportfor Busfield to the judge in the case. In her message, she called the actor "my love, my rock, my partner in business and life," adding that she knows him "better and more intimately than anything in his life ever has."

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"I only want this extraordinary man safe and whole. So, I will close by asking you to please, please, take care of my sweet husband," she added. "As he is my protector, I am his, but I cannot protect him now and I think that, more than anything else, is what is truly breaking my heart. I am relying on your to protect him for me."

Timothy Busfield; Melissa GilbertCredit: Sam Wasson/Getty (2)

On Feb. 6, Busfieldwas indicted by a Bernalillo County grand juryon four counts of criminal sexual contact of a minor (child under 13), District Attorney Sam Bregman announced at the time. All four charges are third-degree felonies and pertain to events in October 2022 and September 2023, according to court documents.

Hepleaded not guilty to all four countson Feb. 10, per a plea entry filed in New Mexico's Second Judicial District Court. On Feb. 11, he waived his arraignment and appearances in court for all pretrial proceedings, and Judge Joseph Montano granted the request on Feb. 18.

Busfield's trial is scheduled to begin in May 2027, his criminal defense attorney Amber Fayerberg confirmed to PEOPLE in March. The date is subject to change and could take place sooner.

In a statement to PEOPLE following the indictment, the actor's lawyer Stanton "Larry" Stein said, "The indictment was not unexpected."

Timothy BusfieldCredit: Giovanni Rufino via Getty

"What is deeply concerning is that the District Attorney is choosing to proceed on a case that is fundamentally unsound and cannot be proven at trial. The detention hearing exposed fatal weaknesses in the State's evidence — gaps that no amount of charging decisions can cure. This prosecution appears driven by something other than the facts or the law," Stein said.

"Mr. Busfield will fight these charges at every stage and looks forward to testing the State's case in open court — where evidence matters — not behind closed doors."

After being released on his own recognizance, Busfield has been ordered to appear for all his future court dates and is not allowed to possess any firearms or dangerous weapons, consume any alcohol or illegal drugs, have contact with the alleged victims or their families, discuss the case with any witnesses or have unsupervised contact with any minor children. The judge also allowed him to travel, but he will be under the supervision of Pretrial Services in New Mexico.

If you suspect child abuse, call the Childhelp National Child Abuse Hotline at 1-800-4-A-Child or 1-800-422-4453, or go to www.childhelp.org. All calls are toll-free and confidential. The hotline is available 24/7 in more than 170 languages.

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Melissa Gilbert Defends Timothy Busfield in New Interview, Calls His Arrest 'Most Traumatizing Experience of Our Lives'

PEOPLE has an exclusive preview of Melissa Gilbert's sit-down interview with ABC's George Stephanopoulos about he...

The Masked Singer aired its season 14 finale on April 1

People Galaxy Girl on 'The Masked Singer' season 14 in 2026Credit: FOX via Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Winners on the competition series receive an award for outlasting the other celebrity contestants

  • The season 14 champion said it felt "amazing" performing onstage again

Victory is hard earned onThe Masked Singer.

Performing in elaborate and imaginative costumes week after week, the singing competitions'scelebrity contestantswork for their place in the last showdown.

The season 14 finale ofThe Masked Singer, which aired on April 1, saw Cat Witch, Crane, Pugcasso and Galaxy Girl making it to the final four.

Only one was declared the winner, but unlike other competition shows, the champion didn't walk away with money.

So, what doesThe Masked Singerwinner get? Here's everything to know about the reality singing competition show's prize.

Warning!The Masked Singerseason 14 spoilers ahead.

What does the winner ofThe Masked Singerget?

Galaxy Girl on 'The Masked Singer' season 14Credit: Michael Becker/FOX

The winner ofThe Masked Singerreceives the coveted Golden Mask trophy.

While the champion claims the physical award, they don't get it until after the finale airs, according to season 8 winnerAmber Riley.

"Here's the thing, you don't get the mask until it's announced that you won," Riley revealed during a December 2022 appearance onThe Jennifer Hudson Show. "Because, let's say I'm on Instagram Live and I got my Mask trophy chilling in the background, you'll give it away."

A rep for the show tells PEOPLE that the award is customized, "Our winners receive the coveted Golden Mask Trophy, engraved with their name, costume and season!"

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Does the winner ofThe Masked Singerreceive any money?

Ashlee Simpson on February 4, 2024 in Los Angeles, CaliforniaCredit: John Salangsang/Billboard via Getty Images

No, the winner ofThe Masked Singerdoes not get prize money along with their Golden Mask trophy.

"The celebrity contestants do not receive any monetary prize — just bragging rights!" a show rep confirms to PEOPLE.

Following her season 14 win,Ashlee Simpsontold PEOPLE that her experience onThe Masked Singermade her want to keep the "momentum going."

"This has felt amazing. Performing is my happy place, and to be doing that again just feels so nice," she said. "I'm inspired to keep playing shows and creating new music."

Do the runners-up onThe Masked Singerget anything?

Pugcasso on 'The Masked Singer' season 14 in 2026Credit: Trae Patton/ FOX

No, the runners-up onThe Masked Singerare not awarded a prize.

How much do contestants get paid onThe Masked Singer?

Cat Witch on 'The Masked Singer' season 14 in 2026Credit: Trae Patton / FOX

According to a show rep, stars participating onThe Masked Singerare paid a former of compensation.

"Contestants do receive a standard stipend for their time spent filming, but the real reward is the pride and glory of making it through the competition!" they tell PEOPLE.

In October 2023,The Masked Singershowrunner James Breen echoed a similar sentiment toCinemablend.

"We have a lot of SAG-AFTRA members for a start. So no one's doing it technically for free," he said. "But I will say they're not compensated to the level where anyone's doing it for the money."

"It's the kind of show. you can't do it halfheartedly," Breen continued, adding, "I wouldn't say anyone's doing it completely for free, but I don't think anyone's ever done this show just for the money."

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“The Masked Singer” Winner Gets a Prize — But It's Not What You Think. All About the Show’s Reward

The Masked Singer aired its season 14 finale on April 1 NEED TO KNOW Winners on the competition series receiv...
Universities pressured to strip names of Epstein associates from campus buildings

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — In rain, snow and bitter cold, a steady drumbeat of small protests have been held in recent months on the Ohio State University main campus with a single goal in mind: removing billionaire retail mogul Les Wexner's name from buildings where it's emblazoned.

Associated Press The Les Wexner Football Complex at the Wood Hayes Athletic Center is seen Monday, March 30, 2026, in Columbus, Ohio. (AP Photo/Patrick Aftoora-Orsagos) Lauren Barnes, a student in the Kennedy School's master's program, stands in front of the Leslie H. Wexner Building at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass., on Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (AP Photos/Michael Casey) The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center is seen Monday, March 30, 2026, in Columbus, Ohio. (AP Photo/Patrick Aftoora-Orsagos) A sign is seen outside of the Les Wexner Football Complex at the Wood Hayes Athletic Center, Monday, March 30, 2026, in Columbus, Ohio. (AP Photo/Patrick Aftoora-Orsagos) A sign is displayed on Farkas Hall, which was endowed by Harvard University alum Andrew Farkas, Friday, Jan. 31, 2025, in Cambridge, Mass. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa, File)

US Epstein Building Names

At issue — for union nurses at OSU's Wexner Medical Center, for former athletes at the Les Wexner Football Complex, and for some student leaders who may walk past the Wexner Center for the Arts near the campus oval — is Wexner'swell-documented associationwith the late sexual predatorJeffrey Epstein.

Similar cries are arising over a Wexner-named building at Harvard University and others around the country named for different Epstein associates, includingSteve Tisch,Casey Wasserman,Glenn DubinandHoward Lutnick.

It's all part of thebacklash across higher educationagainst figures with ties to Epstein, who cultivated an extensive network including powerful people in the arts, business and academia. Scrutiny has landed on university donors as well as several academics whose emails with Epstein surfaced in the latest files, including some whohave resigned.

Wexner complaints cite Epstein association

Wexner hasn't been charged with any crime in connection with Epstein, the one-time financial adviser by whom he sayshe was "duped."

But a group of former Ohio State athletes who surviveda sweeping sexual abuse scandal at the schoolargues that theretired L Brands founder's generosity to his alma mater is now tainted by the knowledge that Epstein was entangled in many of his family's spending decisions, including around the football complex's naming.

"Ohio State University cannot credibly separate itself from these facts, nor can it justify continuing to honor Les Wexner with an athletic facility," their naming removal request read. It went on, "To do so is to ignore the voices of survivors, former athletes, and the broader community who expect accountability, transparency, and moral leadership."

At Harvard, a group of students and faculty at the prestigious Kennedy School has targeted the Leslie H. Wexner Building and the Wexner-Sunshine Lobby. The renaming request submitted in March cites Wexner's "strong ties to Epstein" and argues Epstein profited off Wexner, "which enabled Epstein to use his wealth and power to traffic and abuse children and women."

Some Harvard students and alumni also want the Farkas name removed from Farkas Hall, which hosts the Hasty Pudding TheatricalsMan and Woman of the Year. The building was renamed in 2011 following a significant donation from Andrew Farkas, graduate chairman of the Hasty Pudding Institute, in honor of his father.

Farkas had a longtime personal and business relationship with Epstein, including co-owning a marina with him in the Caribbean. He also repeatedly asked Epstein to donate to Hasty Pudding. Between roughly 2013 and 2019, Epstein regularly donating $50,000 annually to secure top-tier donor status, for a total of more than $300,000.

"As I've said repeatedly, I deeply regret ever having met this individual, but at no time have I conducted myself inappropriately," Farkas said in a statement.

Pressure building on campuses

Pushback against buildings named for Epstein associates is growing on some U.S. campuses.

Just last weekend, the student body at Haverford College in Pennsylvania voted to urge President Wendy Raymond to forge ahead with the renaming process for the Allison &Howard LutnickLibrary. The building is named for the U.S. commerce secretary who has facedresignation callsover his relationship with Epstein.

Raymond had said ina February open letterthat she wasn't ready to do that. In a statement to The Associated Press following Sunday's vote, Raymond said she respected the process and would respond to the resolution within the customary 30-day period.

At Ohio State, pleas against the Wexner name are making their way through a five-stepreview procedure, most of which takes place outside public view and with no set timeline. The university's new president, Ravi Bellamkonda said, "I think the process is thorough, fair, and open, and I will promise you that we will give each request a full consideration."

A spokesman for Harvard confirmed the school has received the Wexner-related name removal request but would not comment further. It would be the university's second name change, after the John Winthrop House, which bore the name of a Harvard professor and a like-named ancestor, was changed to Winthrop House in July over their connections to slavery.

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Tufts University, home to the Tisch Library and theSteve TischSports and Fitness Center, said it continues to look at the matter. The library has moved to clarify that it was not named for Steve, but, in 1992, for his father Preston Tisch, an honored alum. The sports center removed a set of Steve Tisch's handprints during spring break. The university said that was part of a planned renovation.

UCLA'sWassermanFootball Center and Stony Brook University'sDubinFamily Athletic Performance Center also are named for Epstein associates.

Namings often tied to philanthropic giving

The current clamor bears some resemblance to the controversy that surrounded the wealthySackler family's culpabilityin the deadly opioid crisis, because in both cases the institutions involved hadreceived vast sumsfrom the family.

Some major institutions — including museums in New York and Paris, Tufts and the University of Oxford in England — did remove the Sackler name, but Harvard chose not to. In a 15-page report explaining its 2024 decision, the university said the legacy of Arthur M. Sackler, whose company Purdue Pharma made the potent opioid OxyContin, was "complex, ambiguous and debatable."

The Epstein associates whose names are on campus buildings also are typically generous donors, as well as alumni.

Wexner, his wife Abigail and their charities have given Ohio State well over $200 million over the years, for example. That included $100 million to benefit the Wexner Medical Center; at least $15 million for the Wexner Center, a contemporary art museum named for Wexner's father, Harry; and $5 million split with an Epstein-run foundation toward construction of the football complex. The Wexners have given another $42 million to the Harvard Kennedy School.

A moral and financial bind for universities

Anne Bergeron, a museum consultant and author who specializes in the ethics of building naming rights in the cultural sector, said universities are serious about their gift acceptance standards while also recognizing that the conduct of individual donors may be judged differently over time.

"It's no surprise that a lot of these situations arise within the university sphere, because with students — especially the younger generation — there is virtually no tolerance for being associated with anyone who doesn't represent the best of humanity," she said

She called this "a moment of reckoning" for universities and said they have to guard against the appearance of a quid pro quo in their building namings.

Michael Oser, a Columbus-area resident, articulated the frustration of some defenders of retaining the Wexner name in a recent letter-to-the-editor of The Columbus Dispatch.

"OSU took the money. Built the buildings. Cut the ribbons. Smiled for the photos There were no formal 'morality clauses' attached back then, just gratitude and applause," he wrote. "Now, years later, some want to play moral referee while the university keeps the cash and the concrete. That's not accountability. That's convenience."

Supporters of name removal see opportunity for healing

Lauren Barnes, a student in the Kennedy School's master's program leading the effort to remove Wexner's name, said she struggles most days as a survivor of sexual abuse and the mother of a 14-year-old to walk into a building with a name linked to Epstein.

"Thinking about all the children in this world that deserve safety and also all the survivors on campus that have to walk under the Wexner name, I know what that's like to have my heart race and my hands get sweaty," she said. "I hate that anyone else has to have that feeling walking under that name and just dealing with it kind of everywhere on campus."

One protester at Ohio State, Audrey Brill, told a local ABC affiliate that it now "feels gross" thinking of women delivering babies at OSU's Wexner Medical Center "given everything that we're learning about where this money went" — and she feels removing Wexner's name could help.

Some protesters also want the name of Dr. Mark Landon, a prominent Ohio State gynecologist who received five-figure quarterly payments from Epstein between 2001 and 2005, removed from a visitor's lounge in the hospital's new $2 billion, 26-story tower. Landon have said the money was for biotech investment consulting for Wexner, not health care for Epstein or any of his victims.

Casey contributed from Boston.

Universities pressured to strip names of Epstein associates from campus buildings

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — In rain, snow and bitter cold, a steady drumbeat of small protests have been held in recent months ...
Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro raises record $10 million in 2026

Pennsylvania Gov.Josh Shapiro's reelection campaignsays it raised more than $10 million in the first three months of 2026, which sets anew state record for that reporting period.

CBS News

According to a top Shapiro campaign official, the total more than doubles the previous benchmark for a Pennsylvania gubernatorial race at this stage. The official says the haul puts the campaignin a strong financial position after ending 2025 with over $30 million cash on hand.

The fundraising haul was first reported byAxios.

The contributions came from all 67 counties in Pennsylvania and across all 50 states, reflecting what a top Shapiro aide described as broad national and in-state support. The contributions from across the country show his deepening national donor network ahead of a potential 2028 presidential run.

Shapiro's book, "Where We Keep the Light," was released in January, and he kicked off a nationwide book tour that included national appearances such as "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert."

Shapiro is donating $250,000 to the state party, focusing on party infastructrue and on flipping four GOP-held battleground seats, the official said.

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Shapiro, a potential 2028 Democratic presidential contender who was also considered a possible running mate for Kamala Harris in 2024, is expected to faceRepublican state Treasurer Stacy Garrityin the gubernatorial general election as he seeks a second term in November. Pennsylvania's primary will be on May 19.

Shapiro reaffirmed Tuesday that he won't make a decision about 2028 until after the midterm elections while at a book tour stop in Erie, Pennsylvania.

"So the only thing I'm focused on, the only thing I think anyone should be focused on, is having a national referendum in these midterms, having an extraordinary turnout for state representative, state senator, Congress, governor — I'm on the ballot again this year," Shapiro said, according to theErie Times-News. "It is really, really important we have a national referendum, sending a clear message that we do not like what we're seeing in Washington, D.C."

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Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro raises record $10 million in 2026

Pennsylvania Gov.Josh Shapiro's reelection campaignsays it raised more than $10 million in the first three months of ...
Passengers Left in Middle of Busy Traffic After Over 100 Self-Driving Taxis Stop Running in 'System Malfunction'

Over 100 self-driving taxis in China stopped mid-traffic due to a system malfunction, stranding passengers in busy streets

People Baidu Apollo Go self-driving taxiCredit: VCG/VCG via Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • No injuries were reported, though videos posted online showed widespread disruption and at least one crash involving a halted vehicle.

  • The incident adds to growing concerns about autonomous vehicle safety, following recent issues in the U.S. involving driverless cars

Passengers in Wuhan, China, were left stranded in the middle of busy streets after a large group of self-driving taxis stopped working at the same time.

A mass outage involving at least 100 robotaxis caused the vehicles to halt mid-traffic on Tuesday evening, with authorities later attributing the disruption to a "system malfunction." Officials did not provide further details, and no injuries were reported, per theAssociated Press.

Videoscirculating on social media showed driverless cars sitting motionless in active roadways, some blocking lanes and intersections.In one clip, a crash involving a stopped vehicle could be seen, though theBBC reportedthere were no injuries and that passengers were able to exit the vehicles safely.

The vehicles are operated by Apollo Go, an autonomous ride-hailing service run by Chinese tech company Baidu. The company has been expanding its robotaxi operations across China and has plans to grow internationally, according toCNBC.

A Baidu's Apollo Go self-driving taxiCredit: VCG/VCG via Getty

For passengers inside the cars, the experience was both confusing and unsettling.

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According to the Associated Press, one passenger told Chinese media that their robotaxi stopped shortly after turning a corner. A message displayed on the vehicle's screen read, "Driving system malfunction. Staff are expected to arrive in 5 minutes." When no one arrived, the passenger pressed an SOS button and was again told that help was on the way. The rider was ultimately able to open the door and exit the vehicle on their own.

The Wuhan incident comes amid a series of recent issues involving self-driving vehicles, both in the United States and abroad.

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

In December, a widespreadpower outage in San Franciscoleft roughly 130,000 homes and businesses without electricity, PEOPLE reported at the time. During the blackout, driverless cars were unable to function properly without traffic signals, stopping in the middle of roads and contributing to traffic jams.

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Passengers Left in Middle of Busy Traffic After Over 100 Self-Driving Taxis Stop Running in 'System Malfunction'

Over 100 self-driving taxis in China stopped mid-traffic due to a system malfunction, stranding passengers in busy street...
Immigrants seeking asylum are ordered to countries they've never been to, but end up stuck in limbo

The Afghan man had fled the Taliban for refuge in upstate New York when U.S. immigration authorities ordered him deported to Uganda. The Cuban woman was working at a Texas Chick-fil-A when she was arrested after a minor traffic accident and told she was being sent to Ecuador.

Associated Press FILE - Migrants deported months ago by the United States to El Salvador under the Trump administration's immigration crackdown arrive at Simon Bolívar International Airport, in Maiquetia, Venezuela, July 18, 2025. (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos, File) FILE - Arturo Suárez, left, a musician, one of the Venezuelan migrants deported months ago to El Salvador by the United States under the U.S. President Donald Trump administration's immigration crackdown, reacts as he returned home and was welcomed by his relatives, in Caracas, Venezuela, July 22, 2025. (AP Photo/Cristian Hernandez, File) The image above shows the number of third country ordered deportations by U.S. immigration judges from Dec. 2025-Feb. 2026. (AP Digital Embed) FILE - A Cuban man, who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals, adapts to life in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, Feb. 13, 2026, after agreeing to self-deport last year from the Camp East Montana detention center in El Paso, Texas, where he says he desperately requested medication to treat diabetes and high blood pressure and never received it. (AP Photo/Morgan Lee, File) FILE - A U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement flight operates out of King County International Airport-Boeing Field, Aug. 23, 2025, in Seattle. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson, File)

Immigration Third Country Deportations

There's the Mauritanian man living in Michigan told he'd have to go to Uganda, the Venezuelan mother in Ohio told she'd be sent to Ecuador and the Bolivians, Ecuadorians and so many others across the country ordered sent to Honduras.

They are among more than 13,000 immigrants who were living legally in the U.S., waiting for rulings on asylum claims, when they suddenly faced so-calledthird-countrydeportation orders,destined for countrieswheremost had no ties, according to the nonprofit group Mobile Pathways, which pushes for transparency in immigration proceedings.

Yet few have been deported, even as the White House pushes forever more immigrant expulsions. Thanks to unexplained changes in U.S. policy, many are now mired in immigration limbo, unable to argue theirasylum claimsin court and unsure if they'll be shackled and put on a deportation flight to a country they've never seen.

Some are in detention, though it's unclear how many. All have lost permission to work legally, a right most had while pursuing their asylum claims, compounding the worry and dread that has rippled through immigrant communities.

And that may be the point.

"This administration's goal is to instill fear into people. That's the primary thing," said Cassandra Charles, a senior staff attorney with the National Immigration Law Center, which has been fighting the Trump administration's mass deportation agenda. The fear of being deported to an unknown country could, advocates believe, drive migrants to abandon their immigration cases and decide to return to their home countries.

Things may be changing.

In mid-March, top Immigration and Customs Enforcement legal officials told field attorneys with the Department of Homeland Security in an email to stop filing new motions for third-country deportations tied to asylum cases. The email, which has been seen by The Associated Press, did not give a reason. It has not been publicly released, and DHS did not respond to requests to explain if the halt was permanent.

But the earlier deportation cases? Those are continuing.

An asylum-seeker says she's in panic over possibly being sent to a country she doesn't know

In 2024, a Guatemalan woman who says she had been held captive and repeatedly sexually assaulted by members of powerful gang arrived with her 4-year-old daughter at the U.S.-Mexico border and asked for asylum. She later discovered she was pregnant with another child, conceived during a rape.

In December, she sat in a San Francisco immigration courtroom and listened as an ICE attorney sought to have her deported.

The ICE attorney didn't ask the judge that she be sent back to Guatemala. Instead, the attorney said, the woman from the Indigenous Guatemalan highlands would go to one of three countries: Ecuador, Honduras or across the globe to Uganda.

Until that moment, she'd never heard of Ecuador or Uganda.

"When I arrived in this country, I was filled with hope again and I thanked God for being alive," the woman said after the hearing, her eyes filling with tears. "When I think about having to go to those other countries, I panic because I hear they are violent and dangerous." She spoke on condition of anonymity, fearing reprisal from U.S. immigration authorities or the Guatemalan gang network.

There have been more than 13,000 removal orders for asylum-seekers

ICE attorneys, the de facto prosecutors in immigration courts, were first instructed last summer to file motions known as "pretermissions" that end migrants' asylum claims and allow them to be deported.

"They're not saying the person doesn't have a claim," said Sarah Mehta, who tracks immigration issues at the American Civil Liberties Union. "They're just saying, 'We're kicking this case completely out of court and we're going to send that person to another country.'"

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The pace of deportation orders picked up in October after a ruling from the Justice Department's Board of Immigration Appeals, which sets legal precedent inside the byzantine immigration court system.

The ruling from the three judges — two appointed by Attorney General Pam Bondi and the third a holdover from the first Trump administration — cleared the way for migrants seeking asylum to be removed to any third country where the U.S. State Department determines they won't face persecution or torture.

After the ruling, the government aggressively expanded the practice of ending asylum claims.

More than 13,000 migrants have been ordered deported to so-called "safe third countries" after their asylum cases were canceled, according to data from San Francisco-based Mobile Pathways. More than half the orders were for Honduras, Ecuador or Uganda, with the rest scattered among nearly three dozen other countries.

Deported migrants are free, at least theoretically, to pursue asylum and stay in those third countries, even if some have barely functioning asylum systems.

Deportations have been far more complicated than the government expected

Immigration authorities have released little information about the third-country agreements, known as Asylum Cooperative Agreements, or the deportees, and it's unclear exactly how many have been deported to third countries as part of asylum removals.

According to Third Country Deportation Watch, a tracker run by the rights groups Refugees International and Human Rights First, fewer than 100 of them are thought to have been deported.

In a statement, DHS called the agreements "lawful bilateral arrangements that allow illegal aliens seeking asylum in the United States to pursue protection in a partner country that has agreed to fairly adjudicate their claims."

"DHS is using every lawful tool available to address the backlog and abuse of the asylum system," said the statement, which was attributed only to a spokesperson. There are roughly 2 million backlogged asylum cases in the immigration system.

But deportations clearly turned out to be far more complicated than the government expected, restricted by a variety of legal challenges, the scope of the international agreements and a limited number of airplanes.

Mobile Pathways data, for example, shows that thousands of people have been ordered deported to Honduras — despite a diplomatic agreement that allows the country to take a total of just 10 such deportees per month for 24 months. Dozens of people ordered to Honduras in recent months did not speak Spanish as their primary language, but were native speakers of English, Uzbek and French, among other languages.

And while hundreds of asylum-seeking migrants have been ordered sent to Uganda, a top Ugandan official said none have arrived. U.S. authorities may be "doing a cost analysis" and trying to avoid dispatching flights with only a few people on board, Okello Oryem, the Ugandan minister of state for foreign affairs, told The Associated Press.

"You can't be doing one, two people" at a time," Oryem said. "Planeloads — that is the most effective way."

Many immigration lawyers suspect that the March email ordering a halt in new asylum pretermissions could indicate a shift toward other forms of third-country deportations.

"Right now they haven't been able to remove that many people," said the ACLU's Mehta. "I do think that will change."

"They're in a hiring spree right now. They will have more planes. If they get more agreements, they'll be able to send more people to more countries."

Associated Press reporters Garance Burke in San Francisco, Joshua Goodman in Miami, Rodney Muhumuza in Kampala, Uganda, Marlon González in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, and Molly A. Wallace in Chicago contributed to this report.

Immigrants seeking asylum are ordered to countries they've never been to, but end up stuck in limbo

The Afghan man had fled the Taliban for refuge in upstate New York when U.S. immigration authorities ordered him deported...

 

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