Lodi News-Sentinel

Detentions spike, border arrests decline during Trump’s first year

- By Elliot Spagat and Jill Colvin

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s immigratio­n crackdown has produced a spike in detentions by deportatio­n officers across the country during his first months in office. At the same time, arrests along the Mexican border have fallen sharply, apparently as fewer people have tried to sneak into the U.S.

Figures released by the Department of Homeland Security on Tuesday show Trump is delivering on his pledge to more strictly control immigratio­n and suggest that wouldbe immigrants are getting the message to not even think about crossing the border illegally.

Even as border crossings decline, however, Trump continues to push for his promised wall along the border — a wall that critics say is unnecessar­y and a waste of cash.

The new numbers, which offer the most complete snapshot yet of immigratio­n enforcemen­t under Trump, show that Border Patrol arrests plunged to a 45-year low in the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, with far fewer people being apprehende­d between official border crossings.

In all, the Border Patrol made 310,531 arrests in fiscal 2016, down 25 percent from a year earlier and the lowest level since 1971.

Officials have credited that drop to Trump’s harsh anti-immigratio­n rhetoric and policies, including widely publicized arrests of immigrants living in the U.S. illegally.

“There’s a new recognitio­n by would-be immigrants that the U.S. is not hanging up a welcome sign,” said Michelle Mittelstad­t, of the non-partisan Migration Policy Institute think tank. She pointed to Trump’s rhetoric, as well as his policies. “I think there’s a sense that the U.S. is less hospitable.”

But Mittelstad­t also stressed that the numbers are part of a larger trend that began well before Trump’s inaugurati­on: Mexico’s improving economy and more opportunit­ies at home have stemmed the tide of people flowing across the border for work.

“You’ve really had a realignmen­t in migration from Mexico,” she said, noting that the numbers of Mexicans apprehende­d in 2017 fell by 34 percent from the previous year.

 ?? DREAMSTIME/TNS FILE PHOTOGRAPH ?? A Border Patrol vehicle drives along the San Diego-Tijuana Internatio­nal Border Wall.
DREAMSTIME/TNS FILE PHOTOGRAPH A Border Patrol vehicle drives along the San Diego-Tijuana Internatio­nal Border Wall.

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