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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, October 18, 2018
Record number of families crossing U.S. border as Trump threatens new crackdown
The Washington Post joined agents from U.S. Customs and Border Protection on a patrol along the border near McAllen, TX. (Video: Jon Gerberg/Photo: Jahi Chikwendiu/The Washington Post)
The number of migrant parents entering the United States with children
has surged to record levels in the three months since President Trump
ended family separations at the border, dealing the administration a
deepening crisis three weeks before the midterm elections.
Border Patrol agents arrested 16,658 family members in September, the
highest one-month total on record and an 80 percent increase from July,
according to unpublished Department of Homeland Security statistics
obtained by The Washington Post.
Large groups of 100 or more Central American parents and children have
been crossing the Rio Grande and the deserts of Arizona to turn
themselves in, and after citing a fear of return, the families are
typically assigned a court date and released from custody.
“We’re getting hammered daily,” said one Border Patrol agent in South
Texas who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not
authorized to speak to the news media.
Having campaigned on a promise to stop illegal immigration and build a
border wall, Trump now faces a spiraling enforcement challenge with no
ready solutions. The soaring arrest numbers — and a new caravan of
Central American migrants heading north — have left him in a furious
state, White House aides say.
Trump has been receiving regular updates on the border numbers, telling
senior policy adviser Stephen Miller and Chief of Staff John F. Kelly
that something has to change, according to senior administration
officials.
Aides including Miller and White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee
Sanders have continually told the president that many of the children
coming across the border are being smuggled illegally and that the
United States is being taken advantage of. The president’s welling anger
has left him pushing once more for a reinstatement
of a family-separation policy in some form, which he believes is the
only thing that has worked, despite the controversy it triggered.
One senior official, also not authorized to speak to the media, conceded
that the separations were halted to stanch political fury but ended up
sending a “clear signal” that people could cross, adding, “Now we’re
actually getting crushed.”
GOP strategists working on the midterms said that the separations
coincided with the worst polling times of the presidency and that
reinstituting separations would sag numbers for the Republicans, who are
already struggling in many close races.
Trump continues to criticize Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen
Nielsen and has asked Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to work with Mexico
to make it tougher for Central American immigrants to cross its
southern border, inserting the issue into ongoing trade negotiations.
A senior DHS official said Wednesday that Nielsen continues to take the
lead role engaging with leaders from Central America on migration issues
and has been in regular contact with the Mexican government and the
transition team of President-elect Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who will
take office Dec. 1.
Trump has been lashing out this week at the new caravan
of 2,000 migrants, mostly from Honduras, who crossed into Guatemala on
Monday, pushing past police roadblocks. On Tuesday, Trump threatened
to cut off aid to Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador if their
governments “allow their citizens, or others, to journey through their
borders and up to the United States.”
In a tweet Wednesday morning, Trump urged GOP candidates to campaign on
the issue. “Hard to believe that with thousands of people from South of
the Border, walking unimpeded toward our country in the form of large
Caravans, that the Democrats won’t approve legislation that will allow
laws for the protection of our country,” he wrote. “Great Midterm issue for Republicans!”
The latest DHS figures show 107,212 members of “family units” were taken
into custody during fiscal 2018, obliterating the previous high of
77,857 set in 2016.
The number of “unaccompanied alien children” and single adults
apprehended remained essentially unchanged last month, another
indication that more migrants who might have traveled alone in the past
are now bringing children with them.
Katie Waldman, a DHS spokeswoman, said the agency did not have official
numbers ready to publish, but “current trends indicate enforcement
efforts against single adults entering illegally have been hugely
successful.” However, she said, “the removal of actual family units, or
those posing as family units, has been made virtually impossible by
Congressional inaction — which will most likely result in record numbers
of families arriving illegally in the United States this year.”
There have been several senior-level meetings at the White House about
the numbers, administration officials say, at which Miller has channeled
the president’s frustration.
Miller is pushing for a more aggressive stance, including changes at
U.S. ports of entry that would make it tougher for asylum-seeking
Central Americans to gain admission.
Another option under consideration, known as “binary choice,” would
detain migrant families together and give parents a choice — stay in
immigration jail with their child for months or years as their asylum
case proceeds, or allow their child to be assigned to a government
shelter while a relative or guardian can apply to gain custody.
Some DHS officials remain wary of the proposal and the potential
blowback it could bring, and there is a lack of detention space to
accommodate the record wave of parents and children coming
across.Immigration and Customs Enforcement has about 3,300 detention
beds at three “family residential centers,” but five times as many
parents and children are crossing each month. The volume has overwhelmed
Border Patrol stations and prompted mass releases.
Though the Rio Grande Valley of South Texas remains the busiest corridor
for illegal crossings, Border Patrol agents in recent weeks have seen a
new increase in southern Arizona. Bus-loads of migrant parents and
children have been dropped off at churches and charities there by ICE, which has little detention space for families and pregnant women.
The latest DHS figures show U.S. agents made 396,579 arrests along the
Mexico border during the government’s 2018 fiscal year, a 30 percent
increase over the same period in 2017, when illegal migration dropped to
a 56-year low.
Trump viewed the 2017 figures as a validation of his tough rhetoric on
illegal immigration and had plans to campaign on the achievement this
year. When border arrests jumped earlier this spring, he berated Nielsen and demanded swift action, furious to be losing ground on one of his core issues.
That led to the “zero tolerance” prosecution initiative this spring and
the separation of at least 2,500 children from their parents, hundreds
of whom were deported without their sons and daughters. The president
issued an executive order June 20 ending the practice amid public
outcry.
DHS officials have seen a particularly large increase
this year in families arriving from Guatemala, where smuggling guides
have been encouraging migrants to bring children with them to avoid
deportation.
Courts have limited the amount of time minors can be held in immigration
jails to 20 days, so many parents who arrive with children are fitted
with ankle monitoring bracelets and given a court appointment that may
be several months away.
Administration officials blame this “catch and release” model for the
growing number of families arriving at the border, proposing to end it
by expanding family detention space and changing rules that limit their
ability to hold children in long-term custody.
Agents along the border say the family migration surge has continued this month.
“If October is any indication of what’s to come, Fiscal Year 2019 is
going to be a very busy year,” Manuel Padilla Jr., chief of the Border
Patrol’s Rio Grande Valley sector in South Texas, said
on Twitter. Agents in the sector, the busiest for illegal crossings,
arrested more than 1,900 people last weekend alone, according to
Padilla.



