The Boston Globe

US sues Texas over floating barrier in Rio Grande

Abbott defiant as Justice cites federal violation

- By J. David Goodman

HOUSTON — The Justice Department on Monday filed suit against the state of Texas over its installati­on of a floating barrier meant to stop people from swimming across the Rio Grande, arguing that the interlocki­ng buoys placed in the river by the state violated federal law.

The suit comes after Governor Greg Abbott of Texas, who heralded the installati­on of the 1,000-foot barrier this month, refused a request from the Justice Department to remove the buoys voluntaril­y, vowing instead to fight in court to keep them in place. Abbott has blamed President Biden for the large numbers of migrants crossing the border illegally.

“If you truly care about human life, you must begin enforcing federal immigratio­n laws,” Abbott wrote in a letter to Biden on Monday. “In the meantime, Texas will fully utilize its constituti­onal authority to deal with the crisis you have caused.”

The federal government argues that Texas is in violation of a section of the federal Rivers and Harbors Act that prohibits the placement of structures in waterways without federal approval.

“This floating barrier poses threats to navigation and public safety and presents humanitari­an concerns,” Vanita Gupta, an associate attorney general, said in a statement announcing the suit. “Additional­ly, the presence of the floating barrier has prompted diplomatic protests by Mexico and risks damaging U.S. foreign policy.”

The federal government is asking the court to compel Texas to remove the barriers installed and forbid the installati­on of any new barriers elsewhere in the river.

The emerging legal fight represents the first time that the Justice Department has directly challenged Abbott over his effort to enforce immigratio­n laws, sending thousands of National Guard troops and state police officers to block migrants from crossing into Texas. The multibilli­on-dollar program, begun more than two years ago, is known as Operation Lone Star.

The suit follows growing outcry among Democrats and even some in Texas law enforcemen­t over the increasing­ly aggressive tactics the state is using to block immigrants, including installing additional layers of concertina wire along the banks of the Rio Grande. State police officers have been shouting at migrants to turn back and, in some cases, refusing to provide water to people who request it.

The tactics, described in interviews and in internal e-mails between officers in the Department of Public Safety that were viewed by The New York Times, have been deployed at points along the border where illegal crossings are common, particular­ly in the small border town of Eagle Pass.

Several officers in the agency have raised concerns the newly aggressive approach, which began roughly two months ago and has been referred to by top DPS officials as a “hold the line” operation, has led to injuries among migrants.

Border Patrol officials have also complained to Texas law enforcemen­t, according to a memo sent to DPS and obtained by the Times, that the proliferat­ion of concertina wire along the river, placed there by Texas National Guard troops, has made it more difficult for border agents to help migrants and could lead to more drownings.

On Friday, more than 80 Democratic representa­tives in the US House, including all of those from Texas, signed a letter to Biden urging him to investigat­e the Operation Lone Star program and stop Abbott’s “dangerous and cruel actions” by asserting the federal government’s authority over immigratio­n law.

The buoy barriers, announced by Abbott last month, cover only a small section of the 1,254-mile long border between Mexico and Texas. But their deployment has been a chance for Abbott to make a direct challenge to Biden over the issue of border security.

The Texas governor, a Republican in his third term and a former state attorney general, appeared eager to enter a legal fight with the Democratic president over enforcemen­t of immigratio­n law. “Texas will see you in court, Mr. President,” Abbott wrote in his letter.

The federal government, in its suit Monday, focused on the buoy barriers and federal law surroundin­g navigable waters and did not challenge the other tactics and policies employed by the Abbott administra­tion as part of Operation Lone Star.

 ?? ERIC GAY/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Migrants stand in the Rio Grande behind concertina wire as they try to enter the United States in Eagle Pass, Texas.
ERIC GAY/ASSOCIATED PRESS Migrants stand in the Rio Grande behind concertina wire as they try to enter the United States in Eagle Pass, Texas.

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