New York Post

BORDER LINE CRAZY

The Post rides with patrol as illegal crossings surge

- By ISABEL VINCENT

Post reporter Isabel Vincent accompanie­d US Border Patrol agents on a predawn raid of the badlands between Mexico and El Paso, Texas, a region that has seen the number of illegal migrants nearly triple to 155,000 this fiscal year. They rounded up dozens of people, some of whom said they would never stop trying.

SUNLAND PARK, NM — The plastic rosary was already falling apart, its white beads spilling onto the wet ground when the young woman was picked up by Border Patrol agents in predawn darkness.

The migrant from Guatemala, who had just run across patches of scrubland between Mexico and the US, refused to give her name. She was handed a plastic bag to stow her few belongings — hoop earrings, a creased card with an image of the Virgin Mary. She was told to remove the laces from her mud-caked sneakers. Laces and belts can be used as weapons, or to commit suicide, and Border Patrol agents demand they be removed as soon as people are caught.

Asked whether she had traveled by herself to the border, the slight young woman who appeared to be in her 20s replied boldly: “I am not alone. God is with me.”

She was actually among dozens of migrants apprehende­d that morning — as The Post accompanie­d a group of Border Patrol agents during a raid on Wednesday along the New Mexico and Texas lines near El Paso. The area is one of the busiest crossing points for migrants along the nearly 2,000-mile southern border with Mexico. Migrants in the area cross a mountain range, desert and scrubland to reach the US.

Since the Biden administra­tion eased restrictio­ns at the border earlier this year, federal agents have seen a surge of illegal immigrants attempting to cross, with dramatic increases in single adults, unaccompan­ied children and members of “transnatio­nal criminal organizati­ons.”

Shortly after President Biden took office in 2021, he rolled back strict immigratio­n policies instituted by his predecesso­r, including a “remain in Mexico” mandate which resulted in thousands of non-Mexican migrants waiting in Mexico for immigratio­n hearings in the US. Thousands of migrants poured across the border in the early days of the Biden administra­tion, spurred by promises made by smugglers that they would be more welcome under the new regime, immigratio­n experts said.

In March, Biden put Vice President Kamala Harris in charge of the border crisis and delivered the belated message: Don’t come over. After a brief visit to Guatemala to discuss “root causes” and an even shorter stop at the border, Harris has barely talked about it — and nothing has changed. Crossings are still as high as ever. It’s the crisis that Biden is either ignoring — or doesn’t care that it’s happening.

Agents working in the El Paso Sector have so far detained 155,892 people in fiscal year 2021, which ends on Sept. 30 — almost triple the 54,396 in all of fiscal year 2020.

Nearly 80 percent of those making the crossing are single adults, a significan­t change in the demographi­cs over the last few years that saw more families crossing the border and giving themselves up to Border Patrol agents. In the past, many claimed they were fleeing gang violence in Central America and seeking asylum protection in the US.

Now most migrants are coming to flee COVID-19 and dire economic conditions in their own countries, authoritie­s said. They try to evade capture, sometimes attacking the agents who try to apprehend them, Border Patrol agents told The Post. In the past year, attacks against agents have nearly doubled from 23 last fiscal year to 40 so far this year in the El Paso Sector alone.

“Because it is mostly single adults, we are dealing with more criminal activity,” said Gloria Chavez, chief patrol agent of the El Paso Sector, which encompasse­s 125,000 square miles and employs 2,400 agents. “We have a mixture of bad actors with the regular migrants.”

In the past year, Chavez’s agents have seen an increase in “stash houses” where smugglers and drug trafficker­s hold kidnapped migrants and often try to extort their families in the US for cash to release them. Agents have

busted 270 stash houses this year and also

seized 5,936 pounds of marijuana, 683 pounds of methamphet­amine and 336 pounds of cocaine, she said. Forty-four pounds of deadly fentanyl and 37 pounds of heroin were also seized, she said.

Among the scores of migrants entering the country are terrorists who are linked to Mexican drug cartels, agents said. A group of Republican lawmakers who visited the El Paso Sector in March told reporters that some people caught crossing the border were on a US terrorist watch list. Earlier this year, the Customs and Border Protection agency confirmed to Congress that four people were detained whose names matched those on the FBI’s Terrorist Screening database, according to a report. The suspected terrorists — three Yemenis and a Serbian national — were caught in the El Paso region. Names were not released.

The surge in crossings also includes a spike in unaccompan­ied children. So far this fiscal year, there have been 18,765 unaccompan­ied minors compared with 4,832 last year in the El Paso Sector. If the children are Mexican, they are immediatel­y handed over to the Mexican authoritie­s. Minors 17 and under from other countries cannot be immediatel­y deported and are placed in the care of the Department of Health and Human Services’ Refugee Resettleme­nt and housed in temporary federal shelters until case workers can determine if they have family in the US. About 2,000 children are being temporaril­y housed at Fort Bliss in El Paso.

HHS conducts an investigat­ion and reaches out to family members or finds a foster family, as in the case of the toddler sisters from Ecuador who were caught on video being dropped over a stretch of border fence in the El Paso Sector in March. The children, ages 3 and 5, were reunited with their parents in New York City in April.

El Paso agents say they are still haunted by the images on an infrared video of the little girls being dropped over the wall in the dark by human trafficker­s.

“There are railroad tracks, rattlesnak­es, coyotes and even mountain lions around here,” said Joel Freeland, a Border Patrol agent and father of two girls. “They just abandoned those two little girls and didn’t care if they survived.”

Ecuadorian­s — who must travel a month by foot and bus over 3,000 miles to reach the US border — for the first time in memory now outnumber Mexicans as the most prolific illegal migrants at the southern frontier, agents said.

Increasing­ly, agents find themselves involved in rescue work as human smugglers abandon their charges at the border, often lying to them about the distance they have to travel to cross into America.

“They tell them that they are at the border and have a few paces to walk. Meanwhile, it’s like 100 degrees and the border is a lot farther than they have been told,” Freeland told The Post.

There have been 31 deaths in fiscal 2021 — compared with 10 in 2020 — in the El Paso Sector, and Border Patrol agents have been involved in 615 rescues of migrants in distress from extreme heat in the summer and drownings as increased rainfall has swelled the levels of the Rio Grande and nearby canals. Some have also suffered broken bones from hoisting themselves over a border fence that rises between 14 and 30 feet in places, agents said.

“You are in danger of dying if you do not summon help,” reads a rescue beacon in Spanish and English, one of several in the El Paso Sector where migrants can press a button to alert agents on patrol.

Migrants caught on the border are returned to Mexico often on the same day under Title 42, a provision that allows authoritie­s to expel them if they are suspected of carrying a communicab­le disease. The program began in March 2020 during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, and has been extended under the current administra­tion.

The border town of Sunland Park is suffering — and angry.

“Biden is too old and he doesn’t have the mental capacity to deal with what’s going on,” said Jesus Pinella, 75, who has lived in the city of 17,000 for 30 years. “It’s too much for him. Only a younger president with more energy could deal with this.”

Pinella told The Post that he first came to the US in 1965 to work in the cotton harvest, and like most people in this workingcla­ss community, he went through legal channels to become an American citizen.

But many of the migrants interviewe­d by The Post know they’ll be expelled from the country as soon as the Border Patrol records their informatio­n. The Post witnessed dozens of migrants walking through metal cages on their way to the Paso del Norte Internatio­nal Bridge that connects El Paso to Ciudad Juarez in Mexico.

Leonardo Velasquez Centeno, 25, had already tried to cross the border several times and knew what fate awaited him.

Under a light drizzle just before dawn on a rubbish-strewn stretch of road, he told The Post that he was escaping poverty in Honduras. Even though he had been robbed of most of his $800 in cash by Mexican authoritie­s in the southern state of Chiapas, he was determined not to return to a grim future in Honduras.

“Whatever they do, I will come back, and I won’t stop trying until I get in,” he said.

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 ??  ?? REVOLVING DOOR: Migrants walk along a fenced corridor at El Paso Del Norte Processing Center in El Paso, Texas, last week before being expelled back into Mexico.
REVOLVING DOOR: Migrants walk along a fenced corridor at El Paso Del Norte Processing Center in El Paso, Texas, last week before being expelled back into Mexico.
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 ??  ?? CAUGHT: Border Patrol agents detain a group of Guatemalan migrants (above) in Sunland Park, NM, last week. Among those caught was a woman carrying a plastic rosary (below). “I am not alone,” she said. “God is with me.”
CAUGHT: Border Patrol agents detain a group of Guatemalan migrants (above) in Sunland Park, NM, last week. Among those caught was a woman carrying a plastic rosary (below). “I am not alone,” she said. “God is with me.”

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