Border and Enforcement News
Since
January 7, Border Patrol agents in Yuma, Arizona have apprehended approximately
200 illegal immigrants per day. Every
year at this time, agents see an increase in the number of immigrants who are
apprehended by the border. This
increase is attributed to the large number of illegal immigrants attempting to
return to the US after visiting family and friends in Mexico for the holidays
and those immigrants heading to California for the new agricultural season.
Agents have also apprehended a large number of illegal immigrants
attempting to enter the US for the first time.
*****
According
to data compiled by the DHS, from 2002 to 2003, the number of travelers pulled
out of line at passport screenings at airports, seaports and land crossings has
increased by 500,000. In 2003, 10.4
million travelers were subjected to further scrutiny, known as secondary
inspection, compared to 9.9 million in 2002.
The increase in secondary inspections is attributed to increased wariness
by inspectors and more names listed on criminal and terrorist computer
databases.
In
many cases, the names of travelers are similar to those names on criminal and
terrorist databases, and these delayed travelers are ultimately cleared through
security. However, in 2002, about
520,000 travelers were denied entry after secondary inspections, an increase
since 2001.
Traveler
scrutiny has increased since it was discovered that two of the nineteen
September 11 terrorists had been subject to secondary scrutiny because
inspectors thought they were trying to improperly use their visitor visas.
They were cleared after inspectors learned that they had applied for
student pilot visas.
*****
The
Border Patrol intends to install 50 portable lights in Campo and Boulevard along
the US-Mexico border. The lights
are intended to halt the increase in illegal migration across the border at
remote areas. Eventually, the
Border Patrol intends to install lights across the entire border.
*****
Eighty people on four boats were returned to the Dominican Republic after Coast Guard officials found them at sea. The boats were found between Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic. Nearly 500 people from the Dominican Republic have been prevented from illegally entering the United States since the beginning of the year.
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Disclaimer: This newsletter is provided as a public service and not intended to establish an attorney client relationship. Any reliance on information contained herein is taken at your own risk.