BORDER CROSSINGS ALREADY SURPASSING LAST YEAR’S TOTAL IN RGV SECTOR
3-YEAR OLD FOUND ALONE IN TEXAS FIELD, LEFT BEHIND BY HUMAN SMUGGLERS
SUPREME COURT TO HEAR CASES DETERMINING IF GENDER IS BIOLOGY OR MINDSET
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PRAY FOR AMBASSADOR BROWNBACK TODAY
BORDER CROSSINGS ALREADY SURPASSING LAST YEAR’S TOTAL IN RGV SECTOR
Less than seven months into the fiscal year, the Rio Grande Vally sector has apprehended more than 164,000 migrants [already surpassing last year’s total].
From October, when the federal government’s fiscal year began, through Sunday, more than 164,000 migrants have been apprehended in the sector, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection. During the entire 2018 fiscal year, the sector reported 162,262 apprehensions.
The increase is the result of an ongoing surge of migrants, most of them from Central America, who are crossing the border to seek asylum. The 2019 total for the Rio Grande Valley includes 15,310 unaccompanied minors apprehended from October through March — compared to 23,760 during the entire 2018 fiscal year — and 79,000 people who were traveling in families during the same time frame, which has already surpassed the 63,280 family members apprehended in 2018 (April figures were not immediately available).
The Border Patrol has reported similar increases along the entire southwest border.
President Donald Trump has made several attempts to curb the flow of migrants attempting to enter the country illegally, including last year’s controversial zero-tolerance policy that led to family separations — a policy that was rescinded after sparking public outrage. The president also recently enacted the Migration Protection Protocols, also known as “Remain in Mexico,” which requires some asylum seekers to wait in Mexico until their court hearings in the United States. That policy is still in effect pending a federal appeals court’s decision on whether to let the program continue.
Last week, U.S. Attorney General William Barr ruled that some asylum seekers are generally ineligible for bonds and should remain in federal detention while their asylum cases are pending. That policy will go into effect in about three months, although it is likely to be challenged in court.
(Excerpted from The Texas Tribune, Julian Aguilar reporting.)
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Thank You, Lord, for making the border crisis so obvious that
Democrats look foolish for having so stubbornly denied its reality. Hopefully, Americans will see that Trump is the one with America’s best interests at heart and that, although he casts about in his search for solutions and sometimes fails, he never gives up on his main goal. Lord, bless him and his advisors abundantly and grant him another four years in office to turn this country around. Amen.