19 states ask SCOTUS to keep Title 42 in place or risk border 'crisis of unprecedented proportions'
A group of 19 states on Monday asked the U.S. Supreme Court to intervene and stop the immigration restriction Title 42 from ending this week -- contending that not doing so "will cause a crisis of unprecedented proportions at the border."
"Getting rid of Title 42 will recklessly and needlessly endanger more Americans and migrants by exacerbating the catastrophe that is occurring at our southern border," Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich said in a statement. "Unlawful crossings are estimated to surge from 7,000 per day to as many as 18,000."
The policy known as Title 42 started in 2020, under President Donald Trump, in the early weeks of the COVID-19 pandemic and has since been used to expel migrants from the southern border more than 2.4 million times on the basis of public Health concerns.
MORE: Texas Gov. Greg Abbott says end of Title 42 will bring 'total chaos'
Due to the rapid nature of the expulsions, which usually take place in a matter of hours, access to asylum and other humanitarian protections is sharply curtailed.
The American Civil Liberties Union and other advocates have been waging a legal battle against the order, claiming it violates federal and international law.
In Monday's application for a stay, the states, which are mostly Republican-led, again argued that lifting Title 42 will create an influx of unauthorized migrants who will unduly burden government services like law enforcement, Education and Health care.
Border Patrol made a record 2.2 million apprehensions along the southern border this past fiscal year. Meanwhile, the Biden administration removed 1.4 million people under both Title 42 and the standard immigration authority, Title 8.

The states also maintain that the federal government is essentially trying to have it both ways on the controversial policy -- what the states call "collusion and contradiction" -- because the government first defended Title 42 earlier in the litigation and then switched sides and supported the lower court decision to strike it down.
Last month, U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan ruled that Title 42 was "arbitrary and capricious" and that its public health impact was minimal.
Sullivan set a Wednesday deadline to end the protocols.
A federal appeals court on Friday denied the states' effort to keep Title 42 in place.
MORE: Republicans talk of 'chaos' at the border without Title 42 but don't have better plan: Padilla
The states are now seeking a stay from Chief Justice John Roberts, who oversees the appellate circuit handling the case, as well as for the full Supreme Court to hear their appeal while Title 42 remains in place.
Roberts is unlikely to decide the issue on his own and would instead refer the application to the full court for a private vote. There is no set timeline for this.
The justices could deny the application for a stay, clearing the way for Title 42 to end on Wednesday, or they could issue a stay, keeping the policy in place, and they could agree to hear the appeal by granting a writ of certiorari.
Roberts could also issue an administrative stay of days or weeks, given the rapidly approaching Wednesday deadline, in order to allow more time for the justices to make a decision.
A decision to grant a stay rests on whether the court believes the states have a "likelihood of success on the merits."

The appellate ruling last week was unanimous -- and procedural. The lower court judges found that the states became involved too late in the process, given their purported alarm.
"In this case, the inordinate and unexplained untimeliness of the States' motion to intervene on appeal weighs decisively against intervention," the panel wrote, noting that the lawsuit had been pending for almost two years.
White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Monday that the administration is still preparing to end the Title 42 protocols as ordered.
"What I can tell you is we are required by a court order to lift Title 42. That's Dec. 21. And we're going to comply with that order," she said.
In a statement last week, after the appeals court ruled against the states, White House spokesman Abdullah Hasan said that the administration "will continue to fully enforce our immigration laws and work to expand legal pathways for migration while discouraging disorderly and unsafe migration ."
"To be clear: the lifting of the Title 42 public health order does not mean the border is open," Hasan said then. "Anyone who suggests otherwise is doing the work of smugglers spreading misinformation to make a quick buck off of vulnerable migrants."
ABC News' Sarah Kolinovsky contributed to this report.
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