Springfield News-Sun

Illegal border crossing arrests reach all-time high

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WASHINGTON — Arrests for illegal border crossings from Mexico reached an alltime high in December since monthly numbers have been released, authoritie­s said Friday, exposing a growing vulnerabil­ity for President Joe Biden in his campaign for a second term.

The Border Patrol tallied 249,785 arrests on the Mexican border in December, up 31% from 191,112 in November and up 13% from 222,018 in December 2022, the previous all-time high.

Arrests fell more than half during the first two weeks of January, “consistent with historical trends and enhanced enforcemen­t,” U.S. Customs and Border Protection said in a statement. CBP previously said a crackdown by Mexican authoritie­s contribute­d to the January decline.

Mexicans accounted for 56,236 arrests in December, while Venezuelan­s were second with 46,937, erasing much of the decline that followed the start of deportatio­n flights to Venezuela in October. Arrests of Guatemalan­s surged, with Hondurans and Colombians rounding out the top five nationalit­ies.

Tucson, Arizona, was again the busiest corridor for illegal crossings among nine sectors on the Mexican border, with 80,185 arrests. Del Rio, Texas, the focus of Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s enforcemen­t efforts, was second with 71,095 arrests. San Diego, where nearly 6,000 Chinese were arrested, was a distant third.

When including migrants who were allowed to enter the United States under new or expanded legal pathways, migrant encounters totaled 302,034, topping 300,000 for the first time and shattering the previous high of 269,735 in September. U.S. authoritie­s admitted 45,770 people at land crossings with Mexico in December through an online appointmen­t system called CBP One, bringing the total to more than 413,000 since it was introduced a year ago.

The administra­tion’s broad use of parole authority to allow migrants in the country has been a major sticking point in Senate negotiatio­ns over border security.

 ?? VERÓNICA G. CÁRDENAS / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Migrants cross through an opening in the concertina wire to turn themselves in to Border Patrol and begin the immigratio­n process in Eagle Pass, Texas, in September 2023.
VERÓNICA G. CÁRDENAS / THE NEW YORK TIMES Migrants cross through an opening in the concertina wire to turn themselves in to Border Patrol and begin the immigratio­n process in Eagle Pass, Texas, in September 2023.

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