Border apprehensions
plummet to near zero amid pandemic
The
Border Patrol apprehended 98.5 percent fewer people crossing into the United
States without authorization in April than it did a year prior as the
coronavirus pandemic shut down large parts of the United States, Mexico and
their mutual border.
According to preliminary Customs and
Border Protection numbers reviewed by The Hill, the Border Patrol apprehended
1,420 people between April 1 and April 29 at the southwest border,
compared with 94,423 in April of 2019.
Apprehensions also dropped 95 percent on
a month-to-month basis, from 29,953 in March.
The
United States and Mexico on March 21 agreed to close the border to authorized
nonessential travel, but the numbers show illegal crossings have also taken a
deep plunge.
Proportionately, the demographics of
people crossing illegally have changed, as Mexican nationals accounted for 34
percent of all illegal crossing attempts in April, while people of other
citizenships — known as "other than Mexican" or OTMs to the Border
Patrol — accounted for 66 percent.
In April 2019, only 17 percent of those
apprehended were Mexicans, while 83 percent were OTMs.
That translates to a 98.8 percent yearly
drop in OTM apprehensions, with 942 in April compared with 78,638 a year
prior.
Similarly, apprehensions of undocumented
minors dropped 98.2 percent, to 150 last month from 8,491 in April 2019.
The apprehension numbers are by far
the lowest monthly numbers this century. Since 2000, the previous lowest record
for apprehensions at the southwest border was 11,127 in April 2017.
Except
for six months in 2017, as President Trump's border policies first fell into
place, there had not been any 30-day span with fewer than 20,000 border
apprehensions since 2000.
Southwest border apprehensions in fiscal
2020 had hovered around 30,000 per month from October to March.
The numbers reviewed by The Hill do not
include what's known as Title 42 expulsions, the removal of immigrants pursuant
to a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention order on the basis of potential
COVID-19 contagion.
In
March, Title 42 expulsions accounted for 6,306 of the 29,953
apprehensions at the southwest border.
It's yet unclear whether the number of
Title 42 expulsions grew significantly in April.
A Customs and Border Protection
representative told The Hill that official Title 42 numbers will be released
Thursday.
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