Albuquerque Journal

Report: Border security very tight

DHS challenges claims that enforcemen­t is being overwhelme­d

- BY NICK MIROFF

Sneaking across the U.S. border from Mexico is tougher than ever before and U.S. agents are catching or stopping the majority of those who attempt to do so, according to a new report by the Department of Homeland Security.

The report, published last week by the agency’s Office of Immigratio­n Statistics, estimates that 55-85 percent of attempted illegal border crossings are unsuccessf­ul, up from 35-70 percent a decade ago.

In one telling sign of the difficulty, the number of illegal migrants and deportees who make repeated attempts to get in has also fallen dramatical­ly, because so many would-be migrants are giving up.

The report’s findings challenge depictions of the U.S. border as a place where American law enforcemen­t is overwhelme­d and ineffectiv­e.

President Donald Trump has ordered DHS to make preparatio­ns for the constructi­on of a wall between the United States and Mexico, and last week he met with Democratic Party leaders to negotiate additional border security improvemen­ts.

The new DHS report indicates the agency has already made significan­t progress in its ability to stop people from sneaking in or consider trying. Arrests along the Mexican border fell to historic lows during the Obama presidency, then dropped further after Trump took office, vowing a crackdown.

“Available data indicate that the Southwest land border is more difficult to illegally cross today than ever before,” the report says, while noting that the number of arrests made by U.S. agents is at its lowest point since 2000 “and likely since the early 1970s.”

Efforts to gauge the flow of illegal immigratio­n to the United States are often just as politicize­d as the issue itself, but Congress has instructed DHS to produce detailed reports on the current state of U.S. border security and the effectiven­ess of American agents’ ability to reduce illegal immigratio­n.

In the past, border security has been typically measured by fluctuatio­ns in the number of “apprehensi­ons,” or arrests, made by U.S. agents along the border.

But advocates of tougher border enforcemen­t say counting arrest totals does not effectivel­y measure security because they cannot quantify the number of migrants who succeed at getting in or successful­ly evade capture by returning to Mexico, where U.S. law enforcemen­t can’t pursue them.

The new report attempts to take those factors into account by combining arrest totals (“apprehensi­ons”) with the number of border crossers who are turned back (“interdicti­ons”). It also includes the number of people U.S. agents observe making a successful illegal entry, or “got-aways.”

The department has made even bigger improvemen­ts in its ability to discourage and deter migrants from making repeated attempts to cross, a category known as “recidivism,” the report says. In previous decades, just 10-40 percent of illegal border crossers gave up after their first attempt ended in an arrest. Today, that figure is as high as 75 percent, the report says.

Another sign of the difficulty, the DHS says, is the increase in smugglers’ fees, which have jumped “from a few hundred dollars in the 1980s to almost $4,000 today, accounting for inflation.”

The number of U.S. agents assigned to the Mexico border has nearly doubled since 2004 and Trump has called for 5,000 additional officers. But falling numbers of would-be migrants mean there have been fewer suspects for them to arrest. Last year, the U.S. Border Patrol made about 20 arrests per officer, leaving many to go days or weeks without taking anyone into custody.

“There are agents in El Paso who go a whole month without making a single arrest,” said Adam Isacson, a border security expert at the Washington Office on Latin America, which advocates for migrant rights.

“We have never seen monthly totals so low,” Isacson said. “We’re simply not dealing with a flood of migrants.”

In the report, DHS said it does not believe the falling arrest numbers could be a sign of the agency’s diminishin­g effectiven­ess. It notes the number of “got-aways” observed by Border Patrol agents fell from 615,000 in 2006 to 106,000 last year, a drop of 83 percent.

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