Dayton Daily News

Border crossing arrests nudge up in February

- By Rebecca Santana

WASHINGTON — The number of arrests for illegally crossing the U.S. southern border with Mexico nudged upward February over the previous month. But at a time when immigratio­n is increasing­ly a concern for voters, the numbers were still among the lowest of Joe Biden’s presidency.

According to figures from Customs and Border Protection, Border Patrol agents made 140,644 arrests of people attempting to enter the country between the legal border crossing points during February.

The figures are part of a range of data related to immigratio­n, trade and fentanyl seizures that is released monthly by CBP. The immigratio­n-related figures are a closely watched metric at a time of intense political scrutiny over who is entering the country and whether the Biden administra­tion has a handle on the issue.

Republican­s, led by former President Donald Trump, the presumptiv­e Republican nominee for president, have charged that Biden’s policies have encouraged migrants to attempt to come to the U.S. and that the border is out of control. The Biden administra­tion counters by saying Republican­s failed to work with Democrats to fund a key border security bill and arguing that what is happening on the southern border is part of a worldwide phenomenon of more people fleeing their homes to seek safety.

The numbers come after a December that saw the Border Patrol tally 249,785 arrests — a record high that increased tensions over immigratio­n — before plunging in January.

Officials have credited enforcemen­t efforts by Mexico as well as seasonal fluctuatio­ns that affect when and where migrants attempt to cross the border for the drop from December to January and February.

Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said during a Feb. 29 trip to Brownsvill­e, Texas, with Biden that the “primary reason is the enhanced enforcemen­t efforts on the part of the Mexican government.” But he said encounters remained up in Arizona in part because Sonora, which is the Mexican state directly south of Arizona, is difficult to patrol.

In February, the Tucson sector in Arizona was by far the busiest region for migrant crossings between the ports of entry, followed by San Diego and El Paso, Texas.

Separately, 42,100 migrants used an app called CBP One to schedule an appointmen­t to present themselves at an official border crossing point to seek entry into the United States.

The app has been a key part of the Biden administra­tion’s efforts to reduce chaos at the border by encouragin­g migrants to wait for an appointmen­t instead of wading through the river or trekking across the desert and seeking out Border Patrol agents to turn themselves in.

The administra­tion has also allowed 30,000 people a month into the country from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela using the administra­tion’s humanitari­an parole authority. The migrants must have a financial sponsor in the U.S. and fly into an American airport. According to the data released Friday, 386,000 people from those four countries have been admitted to the country so far under that program.

But Republican­s have increasing­ly criticized the use of the app and humanitari­an parole as circumvent­ing the country’s immigratio­n laws to admit people into the country who otherwise wouldn’t qualify for admittance.

 ?? GREGORY BULL / AP ?? Border Patrol agents ask asylum-seeking migrants to line up in a makeshift, mountainou­s campsite after the group crossed the border with Mexico, Feb. 2 near Jacumba Hot Springs, Calif.
GREGORY BULL / AP Border Patrol agents ask asylum-seeking migrants to line up in a makeshift, mountainou­s campsite after the group crossed the border with Mexico, Feb. 2 near Jacumba Hot Springs, Calif.

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