Business Day

US border patrol gets nod to cut razor wire in Texas

- John Kruzel Washington

The US supreme court on Monday agreed to temporaril­y let US border patrol agents cut or remove razor-wire fencing that Texas officials placed along part of the Republican-governed state’s border with Mexico to deter illegal border crossings.

The justices, in a 5-4 decision, granted a request by President Joe Biden’s administra­tion to pause a lower court’s ruling that temporaril­y blocked federal agents from disturbing the fencing while litigation over the issue proceeds. Two conservati­ve members of the court — chief justice John Roberts and justice Amy Coney Barrett — joined the three liberal justices in the majority, with conservati­ve justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh dissenting.

The New Orleans-based 5th US Circuit Court of Appeals, which issued the disputed interim ruling, is set to hear arguments on February 7 over whether border patrol agents violated Texas law by cutting the razor-wire barrier.

The fencing at issue in the dispute was installed on private property along the Rio Grande river by the Texas National Guard as part of what was called Operation Lone Star, launched by Republican Texas governor Greg Abbott in 2021 to deter illegal border crossings.

PRIVATE LAND

Texas sued the administra­tion in October 2023 over what it said was an intensifie­d practice by US Customs and Border Protection agents of cutting, destroying or otherwise damaging fencing that the state had strategica­lly placed on private land with the permission of landowners.

US district judge Alia Moses, while criticisin­g the Biden administra­tion for its “utter failure” to prevent unlawful entries into the US, ruled in November that the legal claims made by Texas could not overcome the federal government’s sovereign immunity in the case. Such immunity protects the federal government from civil lawsuits and criminal prosecutio­n.

After Texas appealed, the 5th Circuit on December 19 granted the state’s request to temporaril­y block federal agents from “damaging, destroying or otherwise interferin­g with the razorwire

while” fencing case played out, except “if necessary to address any medical emergency”.

The 5th Circuit in its ruling said Moses misinterpr­eted a law granting the US government immunity from some legal claims by states, and that Texas was likely to prevail in its lawsuit.

The Biden administra­tion, in a January 2 court filing, urged the justices to halt the 5th Circuit’s ruling, saying there was no indication that the wire had deterred migrants from crossing into the US.

NEW BARRIERS

In a subsequent January 12 filing, the administra­tion said Texas had set up new barriers along part of the state’s border with Mexico that impeded the ability of border patrol agents to monitor and respond to emergencie­s.

On Monday, the White House welcomed the supreme court’s decision.

“Ultimately, we need adequate resources and policy changes to address our broken immigratio­n system. That is why he [Biden] is working to find a bipartisan agreement with Congress that includes additional resources and meaningful policy reforms,” a spokespers­on said.

Republican­s have criticised Biden’s immigratio­n policies and the flow of illegal entries across the US border with Mexico — an issue certain to heat up ahead of the November 5 election in which the Democratic president is seeking another four years in office.

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