Migrants leave Bajo Chiquito BAJO CHIQUITO, PANAMA - OCTOBER 11, 2021:
Migrants, predominantly from Haiti, prepare to leave Bajo Chiquito, an indigenous community of the Emberá tribe. This is the first human settlement that migrants arrive at following their grueling 5-7 day trek through the Darien Gap, the most dangerous and lawless stretch of jungle in the world, which separates Colombia and Panama. The migrants begin forming a line at 4am, eager to secure a place on a ‘piragua’ - a motorized dugout canoe service provided by the tribe - for 25 US dollars. This saves the migrants days of additional walking to reach the first official migrant camp in Panama, at Lajas Blancas. Members of Senafront, Panama’s militarized border police force, are on hand to maintain order.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Migrants leave Bajo Chiquito BAJO CHIQUITO, PANAMA - OCTOBER 11, 2021:
Migrants, predominantly from Haiti, prepare to leave Bajo Chiquito, an indigenous community of the Emberá tribe. This is the first human settlement that migrants arrive at following their grueling 5-7 day trek through the Darien Gap, the most dangerous and lawless stretch of jungle in the world, which separates Colombia and Panama. The migrants begin forming a line at 4am, eager to secure a place on a ‘piragua’ - a motorized dugout canoe service provided by the tribe - for 25 US dollars. This saves the migrants days of additional walking to reach the first official migrant camp in Panama, at Lajas Blancas. Members of Senafront, Panama’s militarized border police force, are on hand to maintain order.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Migrants leave Bajo Chiquito BAJO CHIQUITO, PANAMA - OCTOBER 11, 2021:
Migrants, predominantly from Haiti, prepare to leave Bajo Chiquito, an indigenous community of the Emberá tribe. This is the first human settlement that migrants arrive at following their grueling 5-7 day trek through the Darien Gap, the most dangerous and lawless stretch of jungle in the world, which separates Colombia and Panama. The migrants begin forming a line at 4am, eager to secure a place on a ‘piragua’ - a motorized dugout canoe service provided by the tribe - for 25 US dollars. This saves the migrants days of additional walking to reach the first official migrant camp in Panama, at Lajas Blancas. Members of Senafront, Panama’s militarized border police force, are on hand to maintain order.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Migrants leave Bajo Chiquito BAJO CHIQUITO, PANAMA - OCTOBER 11, 2021:
Migrants, predominantly from Haiti, prepare to leave Bajo Chiquito, an indigenous community of the Emberá tribe. This is the first human settlement that migrants arrive at following their grueling 5-7 day trek through the Darien Gap, the most dangerous and lawless stretch of jungle in the world, which separates Colombia and Panama. The migrants begin forming a line at 4am, eager to secure a place on a ‘piragua’ - a motorized dugout canoe service provided by the tribe - for 25 US dollars. This saves the migrants days of additional walking to reach the first official migrant camp in Panama, at Lajas Blancas. Members of Senafront, Panama’s militarized border police force, are on hand to maintain order.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Migrants leave Bajo Chiquito BAJO CHIQUITO, PANAMA - OCTOBER 11, 2021:
Migrants, predominantly from Haiti, prepare to leave Bajo Chiquito, an indigenous community of the Emberá tribe. This is the first human settlement that migrants arrive at following their grueling 5-7 day trek through the Darien Gap, the most dangerous and lawless stretch of jungle in the world, which separates Colombia and Panama. The migrants begin forming a line at 4am, eager to secure a place on a ‘piragua’ - a motorized dugout canoe service provided by the tribe - for 25 US dollars. This saves the migrants days of additional walking to reach the first official migrant camp in Panama, at Lajas Blancas. Members of Senafront, Panama’s militarized border police force, are on hand to maintain order.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Migrants arrive in Bajo Chiquito BAJO CHIQUITO, PANAMA - OCTOBER 10, 2021:
Migrants, predominantly from Haiti, arrive in Bajo Chiquito, an indigenous community of the Emberá tribe, following their grueling 5-7 day trek through the Darien Gap, the most dangerous and lawless stretch of jungle in the world. The migrants disembark and are led by Senafront, the Panamanian border force, to their base where their documents are checked. They are then free to set up camp wherever they find space, and buy food from the locals. Many arrive and ask the soldiers where they can connect to wifi, eager to communicate with friends and loved ones following their journey through the Darien Gap, but unfortunately for them, there is no internet or cell service in the community and they are still hours away by boat from connecting to the outside world.
Photo: Migrants arrive in Bajo Chiquito in a ‘piragua’ - a motorized dug out canoe.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Migrants arrive in Bajo Chiquito BAJO CHIQUITO, PANAMA - OCTOBER 10, 2021:
Migrants, predominantly from Haiti, arrive in Bajo Chiquito, an indigenous community of the Emberá tribe, following their grueling 5-7 day trek through the Darien Gap, the most dangerous and lawless stretch of jungle in the world. The migrants disembark and are led by Senafront, the Panamanian border force, to their base where their documents are checked. They are then free to set up camp wherever they find space, and buy food from the locals. Many arrive and ask the soldiers where they can connect to wifi, eager to communicate with friends and loved ones following their journey through the Darien Gap, but unfortunately for them, there is no internet or cell service in the community and they are still hours away by boat from connecting to the outside world.
Photo: Migrants that have left Bajo Chiquito and are on their way to ERM Lajas Blancas.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Haitian migrants emerge from the Darien Gap into Panama LAJAS BLANCAS, PANAMA - OCTOBER 9, 2021:
800 migrants, mostly from Haiti, arrive on a flotilla of boats at the Lajas Blancas migrant camp in Panama. They have just completed a grueling 5-7 day trek through the Darien Gap, the most dangerous and lawless stretch of jungle in the world, which separates Colombia and Panama.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Haitian migrants emerge from the Darien Gap into Panama LAJAS BLANCAS, PANAMA - OCTOBER 9, 2021:
800 migrants, mostly from Haiti, arrive on a flotilla of boats at the Lajas Blancas migrant camp in Panama. They have just completed a grueling 5-7 day trek through the Darien Gap, the most dangerous and lawless stretch of jungle in the world, which separates Colombia and Panama.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Haitian migrants emerge from the Darien Gap into Panama LAJAS BLANCAS, PANAMA - OCTOBER 9, 2021:
800 migrants, mostly from Haiti, arrive on a flotilla of boats at the Lajas Blancas migrant camp in Panama. They have just completed a grueling 5-7 day trek through the Darien Gap, the most dangerous and lawless stretch of jungle in the world, which separates Colombia and Panama.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Migrants at the San Vicente camp METETI, PANAMA - OCTOBER 8, 2021:
Migrants at the San Vicente Migratory Reception Center in Meteti, Panama. The migrants have just completed a grueling 5-7 day trek through the Darien Gap, the most dangerous and lawless stretch of jungle in the world, which separates Colombia and Panama.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Migrants cross the border in Del Rio, Texas Migrants from Venezuela cross the Rio Grande river into the United States from Mexico in Del Rio, Texas, U.S., May 11, 2021. REUTERS/James Breeden
Migrants cross the border in Del Rio, Texas Migrants from Venezuela cross the Rio Grande river into the United States from Mexico in Del Rio, Texas, U.S., May 11, 2021. REUTERS/James Breeden
Migrants cross the border in Del Rio, Texas Migrants from Venezuela await transportation to a U.S. border patrol facility after crossing the Rio Grande river into the United States from Mexico in Del Rio, Texas, U.S., May 11, 2021. REUTERS/James Breeden
Migrants cross the border in Del Rio, Texas Elvis Gonzales, Carmen Acosta de Gonzales and Pedro Marrufo, migrants from Venezuela, await transportation to a U.S. border patrol processing facility after crossing the Rio Grande river into the United States from Mexico in Del Rio, Texas, U.S., May 11, 2021. REUTERS/James Breeden
Migrants cross the border in Del Rio, Texas Asylum-seeking migrants from Venezuela cross the Rio Grande river into the United States from Mexico in Del Rio, Texas, U.S., May 10, 2021. REUTERS/James Breeden
Migrants cross the Rio Grande river in Texas DEL RIO, TEXAS, USA - May 7, 2021:
An asylum-seeking migrant family from Venezuela are assisted by Texas State Trooper Nubia Rodriguez after wading across the Rio Grande river into the United States from Mexico in Del Rio, Texas, May 7, 2021.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Migrant families arrive in Roma ROMA, TEXAS, USA - April 14, 2021:
Hundreds of Central American migrants arrive in the United States by raft across the Rio Grande river near Roma, Texas, late Wednesday night. Approximately 200 arrived at this one location alone.
Photo: Migrants from El Salvador make their way to the shore on the US side of the river.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Migrant families arrive in Roma ROMA, TEXAS, USA - April 13, 2021:
Central American migrant families from Honduras arrive in Roma, Texas, after crossing the Rio Grande River.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Migrants cross the Rio Grande into America ROMA, TEXAS, USA - April 11, 2021:
Central American migrants cross the Rio Grande river into the United States at Roma, Texas. Coyotes guide the migrants across the river under the cover on darkness on inflatable boats.
Photo: David, 23, from Guatemala hugs his son Andy, 3, after arriving in the United States.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Migrants form new line after Texas troops block access EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 21, 2022:
Migrants have switched to a new crossing point in El Paso after Texas sent in National Guard troops to the border between El Paso and Ciudad Juárez. Migrants are now crossing the Rio Grande river further to the east of the old popular crossing point, and lining up along the U.S. border wall, where Border Patrol agents were seen allowing small groups to enter through a large gate.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Migrants form new line after Texas troops block access EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 21, 2022:
Migrants have switched to a new crossing point in El Paso after Texas sent in National Guard troops to the border between El Paso and Ciudad Juárez. Migrants are now crossing the Rio Grande river further to the east of the old popular crossing point, and lining up along the U.S. border wall, where Border Patrol agents were seen allowing small groups to enter through a large gate.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Migrants form new line after Texas troops block access EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 21, 2022:
Migrants have switched to a new crossing point in El Paso after Texas sent in National Guard troops to the border between El Paso and Ciudad Juárez. Migrants are now crossing the Rio Grande river further to the east of the old popular crossing point, and lining up along the U.S. border wall, where Border Patrol agents were seen allowing small groups to enter through a large gate.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Migrants form new line after Texas troops block access EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 21, 2022:
Migrants have switched to a new crossing point in El Paso after Texas sent in National Guard troops to the border between El Paso and Ciudad Juárez. Migrants are now crossing the Rio Grande river further to the east of the old popular crossing point, and lining up along the U.S. border wall, where Border Patrol agents were seen allowing small groups to enter through a large gate.
Photo: Texas National Guard troops take up positions along the river.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Migrants form new line after Texas troops block access EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 21, 2022:
Migrants have switched to a new crossing point in El Paso after Texas sent in National Guard troops to the border between El Paso and Ciudad Juárez. Migrants are now crossing the Rio Grande river further to the east of the old popular crossing point, and lining up along the U.S. border wall, where Border Patrol agents were seen allowing small groups to enter through a large gate.
Photo: Texas National Guard troops take up positions along the river.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Migrants form new line after Texas troops block access EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 21, 2022:
Migrants have switched to a new crossing point in El Paso after Texas sent in National Guard troops to the border between El Paso and Ciudad Juárez. Migrants are now crossing the Rio Grande river further to the east of the old popular crossing point, and lining up along the U.S. border wall, where Border Patrol agents were seen allowing small groups to enter through a large gate.
Photo: Texas National Guard troops take up positions along the river.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Migrants form new line after Texas troops block access EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 21, 2022:
Migrants have switched to a new crossing point in El Paso after Texas sent in National Guard troops to the border between El Paso and Ciudad Juárez. Migrants are now crossing the Rio Grande river further to the east of the old popular crossing point, and lining up along the U.S. border wall, where Border Patrol agents were seen allowing small groups to enter through a large gate.
Photo: Migrants walk past the huge Texas military presence in El Paso.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Migrants form new line after Texas troops block access EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 21, 2022:
Migrants have switched to a new crossing point in El Paso after Texas sent in National Guard troops to the border between El Paso and Ciudad Juárez. Migrants are now crossing the Rio Grande river further to the east of the old popular crossing point, and lining up along the U.S. border wall, where Border Patrol agents were seen allowing small groups to enter through a large gate.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Texas sends in National Guard troops to El Paso border EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 20, 2022:
Texas sent in National Guard troops and State Troopers to the border between El Paso and Ciudad Juárez after a huge surge in the number of migrants crossing the Rio Grande river into the U.S. in recent days.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Texas sends in National Guard troops to El Paso border EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 20, 2022:
Texas sent in National Guard troops and State Troopers to the border between El Paso and Ciudad Juárez after a huge surge in the number of migrants crossing the Rio Grande river into the U.S. in recent days.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Texas sends in National Guard troops to El Paso border EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 20, 2022:
Texas sent in National Guard troops and State Troopers to the border between El Paso and Ciudad Juárez after a huge surge in the number of migrants crossing the Rio Grande river into the U.S. in recent days.
Photo: A migrant wrapped in a Venezuelan flag looks at the crowds forming on the U.S. side of the Rio Grande river.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Texas sends in National Guard troops to El Paso border EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 20, 2022:
Texas sent in National Guard troops and State Troopers to the border between El Paso and Ciudad Juárez after a huge surge in the number of migrants crossing the Rio Grande river into the U.S. in recent days.
Photo: Texas National Guard and Texas State Troopers hold back migrants who have crossed onto the U.S. side of the Rio Grande river.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Texas sends in National Guard troops to El Paso border EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 20, 2022:
Texas sent in National Guard troops and State Troopers to the border between El Paso and Ciudad Juárez after a huge surge in the number of migrants crossing the Rio Grande river into the U.S. in recent days.
Photo: Texas National Guard and Texas State Troopers hold back migrants who have crossed onto the U.S. side of the Rio Grande river.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Texas sends in National Guard troops to El Paso border EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 20, 2022:
Texas sent in National Guard troops and State Troopers to the border between El Paso and Ciudad Juárez after a huge surge in the number of migrants crossing the Rio Grande river into the U.S. in recent days.
Photo: Texas National Guard and Texas State Troopers hold back migrants who have crossed onto the U.S. side of the Rio Grande river.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Texas sends in National Guard troops to El Paso border EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 20, 2022:
Texas sent in National Guard troops and State Troopers to the border between El Paso and Ciudad Juárez after a huge surge in the number of migrants crossing the Rio Grande river into the U.S. in recent days.
Photo: Texas National Guard and Texas State Troopers hold back migrants who have crossed onto the U.S. side of the Rio Grande river.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Texas sends in National Guard troops to El Paso border EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 20, 2022:
Texas sent in National Guard troops and State Troopers to the border between El Paso and Ciudad Juárez after a huge surge in the number of migrants crossing the Rio Grande river into the U.S. in recent days.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Texas sends in National Guard troops to El Paso border EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 20, 2022:
Texas sent in National Guard troops and State Troopers to the border between El Paso and Ciudad Juárez after a huge surge in the number of migrants crossing the Rio Grande river into the U.S. in recent days.
(Photo by James Breeden)
Texas sends in National Guard troops to El Paso border EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 20, 2022:
Texas sent in National Guard troops and State Troopers to the border between El Paso and Ciudad Juárez after a huge surge in the number of migrants crossing the Rio Grande river into the U.S. in recent days.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Texas sends in National Guard troops to El Paso border EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 20, 2022:
Texas sent in National Guard troops and State Troopers to the border between El Paso and Ciudad Juárez after a huge surge in the number of migrants crossing the Rio Grande river into the U.S. in recent days.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Texas sends in National Guard troops to El Paso border EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 20, 2022:
Texas sent in National Guard troops and State Troopers to the border between El Paso and Ciudad Juárez after a huge surge in the number of migrants crossing the Rio Grande river into the U.S. in recent days.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Huge lines of migrants in US after SCOTUS ruling EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 19, 2022:
Huge lines of migrants formed at the US border in El Paso on Monday night after the Supreme Court temporarily blocked the lifting of Title 42. Migrants who had been waiting in Juárez for the public health order to be lifted decided to cross the Rio Grande river in large numbers.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Huge lines of migrants in US after SCOTUS ruling EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 19, 2022:
Huge lines of migrants formed at the US border in El Paso on Monday night after the Supreme Court temporarily blocked the lifting of Title 42. Migrants who had been waiting in Juárez for the public health order to be lifted decided to cross the Rio Grande river in large numbers.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Huge lines of migrants in US after SCOTUS ruling EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 19, 2022:
Huge lines of migrants formed at the US border in El Paso on Monday night after the Supreme Court temporarily blocked the lifting of Title 42. Migrants who had been waiting in Juárez for the public health order to be lifted decided to cross the Rio Grande river in large numbers.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Huge lines of migrants in US after SCOTUS ruling EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 19, 2022:
Huge lines of migrants formed at the US border in El Paso on Monday night after the Supreme Court temporarily blocked the lifting of Title 42. Migrants who had been waiting in Juárez for the public health order to be lifted decided to cross the Rio Grande river in large numbers.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants continue to arrive at Texas border in large numbers EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 18, 2022:
Migrants continue to cross the Rio Grande river into the United States. El Paso is seeing an overwhelming surge of migrants arriving at their border with Mexico as Title 42 is set to expire.
Photo: Migrants wait to board busses and be processed by immigration authorities after crossing the Rio Grande river into the United States.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants continue to arrive at Texas border in large numbers EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 18, 2022:
Migrants continue to cross the Rio Grande river into the United States. El Paso is seeing an overwhelming surge of migrants arriving at their border with Mexico as Title 42 is set to expire.
Photo: Two migrant children from Venezuela try to stay warm by a fire on the bank of the Rio Grande in Ciudad Juárez. Their parents are waiting until Title 42 expires to attempt to cross into the United States.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants continue to arrive at Texas border in large numbers EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 18, 2022:
Migrants continue to cross the Rio Grande river into the United States. El Paso is seeing an overwhelming surge of migrants arriving at their border with Mexico as Title 42 is set to expire.
Photo: Migrants wait on the Juárez side of the Rio Grande river.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants wait for accomodation at Texas church EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 17, 2022:
Migrants who have been processed and released by authorities wait for volunteers at the Sacred Heart Church in El Paso to open their community center doors. Fr. Rafael Garcia opened their community hall this week to provide migrants with somewhere warm to sleep after temperatures plunged in the Texas city.
El Paso is seeing an overwhelming surge of migrants arriving at their border with Mexico as Title 42 is set to expire.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants wait for accomodation at Texas church EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 17, 2022:
Migrants who have been processed and released by authorities wait for volunteers at the Sacred Heart Church in El Paso to open their community center doors. Fr. Rafael Garcia opened their community hall this week to provide migrants with somewhere warm to sleep after temperatures plunged in the Texas city.
El Paso is seeing an overwhelming surge of migrants arriving at their border with Mexico as Title 42 is set to expire.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants wait for accomodation at Texas church EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 17, 2022:
Migrants who have been processed and released by authorities wait for volunteers at the Sacred Heart Church in El Paso to open their community center doors. Fr. Rafael Garcia opened their community hall this week to provide migrants with somewhere warm to sleep after temperatures plunged in the Texas city.
El Paso is seeing an overwhelming surge of migrants arriving at their border with Mexico as Title 42 is set to expire.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants wait for accomodation at Texas church EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 17, 2022:
Migrants who have been processed and released by authorities wait for volunteers at the Sacred Heart Church in El Paso to open their community center doors. Fr. Rafael Garcia opened their community hall this week to provide migrants with somewhere warm to sleep after temperatures plunged in the Texas city.
El Paso is seeing an overwhelming surge of migrants arriving at their border with Mexico as Title 42 is set to expire.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants sleeping on the streets of El Paso after release EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 15, 2022:
The streets of downtown El Paso are starting to become very busy with migrants sleeping anywhere they can find space after being released by Border Patrol. Due to a huge recent surge in the El Paso sector in Texas, authorities are having to release more migrants onto the street as NGOs that usually help migrants with their onwards journeys around the US struggle to cope with the thousands of daily arrivals. Temperatures tonight will drop below freezing and families with young children are hunkering down with whatever blankets and clothing they can gather.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants sleeping on the streets of El Paso after release EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 15, 2022:
The streets of downtown El Paso are starting to become very busy with migrants sleeping anywhere they can find space after being released by Border Patrol. Due to a huge recent surge in the El Paso sector in Texas, authorities are having to release more migrants onto the street as NGOs that usually help migrants with their onwards journeys around the US struggle to cope with the thousands of daily arrivals. Temperatures tonight will drop below freezing and families with young children are hunkering down with whatever blankets and clothing they can gather.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants sleeping on the streets of El Paso after release EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 15, 2022:
The streets of downtown El Paso are starting to become very busy with migrants sleeping anywhere they can find space after being released by Border Patrol. Due to a huge recent surge in the El Paso sector in Texas, authorities are having to release more migrants onto the street as NGOs that usually help migrants with their onwards journeys around the US struggle to cope with the thousands of daily arrivals. Temperatures tonight will drop below freezing and families with young children are hunkering down with whatever blankets and clothing they can gather.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Huge migrant influx into El Paso EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 13, 2022:
A huge influx of migrants has crossed the US-Mexico border from Ciudad Juárez into El Paso, Texas. After crossing the Rio Grande river that separates the two countries, the migrants faces lengthy delays to be processed by Border Patrol in near-freezing temperatures.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Huge migrant influx into El Paso EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 13, 2022:
A huge influx of migrants has crossed the US-Mexico border from Ciudad Juárez into El Paso, Texas. After crossing the Rio Grande river that separates the two countries, the migrants faces lengthy delays to be processed by Border Patrol in near-freezing temperatures.
Photo: Migrants cross the Rio Grande into the United States.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Huge migrant influx into El Paso EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 13, 2022:
A huge influx of migrants has crossed the US-Mexico border from Ciudad Juárez into El Paso, Texas. After crossing the Rio Grande river that separates the two countries, the migrants faces lengthy delays to be processed by Border Patrol in near-freezing temperatures.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Huge migrant influx into El Paso EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - December 13, 2022:
A huge influx of migrants has crossed the US-Mexico border from Ciudad Juárez into El Paso, Texas. After crossing the Rio Grande river that separates the two countries, the migrants faces lengthy delays to be processed by Border Patrol in near-freezing temperatures.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Democrat-run city of El Paso bussing migrants EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - September 28, 2022:
The Democrat-run city of El Paso in Texas has been bussing migrants north to cities such as Chicago and New York, much like Republican governors Greg Abbott and Ron Ron DeSantis.
Photo: Migrants who have been released from federal custody prepare to board busses chartered by the city of El Paso, headed for New York, at the city’s new migrant welcome center.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Democrat-run city of El Paso bussing migrants EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - September 28, 2022:
The Democrat-run city of El Paso in Texas has been bussing migrants north to cities such as Chicago and New York, much like Republican governors Greg Abbott and Ron Ron DeSantis.
Photo: Migrants who do not have the means for travel await busses chartered by the city of El Paso to destinations such as New York and Chicago, inside the city’s new migrant welcome center.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Democrat-run city of El Paso bussing migrants EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - September 28, 2022:
The Democrat-run city of El Paso in Texas has been bussing migrants north to cities such as Chicago and New York, much like Republican governors Greg Abbott and Ron Ron DeSantis.
Photo: A family from Haiti quickly traverse the Rio Grande river and arrive in the United States, crossing the border illegally from Ciudad Juárez in Mexico near the Paso del Norte International Bridge in downtown El Paso. They immediately turned themselves in to waiting Border Patrol agents.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Lawmakers tour Rio Grande on Texas gunboats MISSION, TEXAS, USA - June 17, 2022:
A congressional delegation of the U.S. House Select Committee on Economic Disparity and Fairness in Growth toured the Rio Grande river, the border between the United States and Mexico, on gunboats of the Texas Highway Patrol. The lawmakers were shown various landing points on the U.S. side where smugglers drop migrants after crossing the river.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Lawmakers tour Rio Grande on Texas gunboats MISSION, TEXAS, USA - June 17, 2022:
A congressional delegation of the U.S. House Select Committee on Economic Disparity and Fairness in Growth toured the Rio Grande river, the border between the United States and Mexico, on gunboats of the Texas Highway Patrol. The lawmakers were shown various landing points on the U.S. side where smugglers drop migrants after crossing the river.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Lawmakers tour Rio Grande on Texas gunboats MISSION, TEXAS, USA - June 17, 2022:
A congressional delegation of the U.S. House Select Committee on Economic Disparity and Fairness in Growth toured the Rio Grande river, the border between the United States and Mexico, on gunboats of the Texas Highway Patrol. The lawmakers were shown various landing points on the U.S. side where smugglers drop migrants after crossing the river.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Lawmakers tour Rio Grande on Texas gunboats MISSION, TEXAS, USA - June 17, 2022:
A congressional delegation of the U.S. House Select Committee on Economic Disparity and Fairness in Growth toured the Rio Grande river, the border between the United States and Mexico, on gunboats of the Texas Highway Patrol. The lawmakers were shown various landing points on the U.S. side where smugglers drop migrants after crossing the river.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants cross the Rio Grande in Texas EAGLE PASS, TEXAS, USA - May 22, 2022:
Asylum-seeking migrants, predominately from Latin American countries, wade across the Rio Grande river from Piedras Negras in Mexico, to Eagle Pass in the United States, a day before Title 42 was set to be lifted. A federal judge blocked the Biden administration's move to lift Title 42 on Friday, a Trump-era policy used to expel more than one million migrants at the southern border.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Thousands of migrants overwhelm border officials in Arizona LUKEVILLE, ARIZONA, USA - December 5, 2023:
A huge surge of thousands of mostly African migrants have overwhelmed border officials in the tiny border town of Lukeville, Arizona. Human smugglers are cutting sections of the border wall faster than they can be repaired and pushing groups of up to a hundred at a time into the U.S. causing CBP to close the nearby Lukeville legal point of entry and redirect officers to help Border Patrol agents process the huge volume of people camped out in the desert. The Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument has been overrun with trash and human waste strewn everywhere in a UNESCO biosphere reserve and place of huge natural beauty.
Photo: As night falls on Tuesday, December 5, migrants build fires to stay warm in the cold of the desert where many will spend the night.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Thousands of migrants overwhelm border officials in Arizona LUKEVILLE, ARIZONA, USA - December 5, 2023:
A huge surge of thousands of mostly African migrants have overwhelmed border officials in the tiny border town of Lukeville, Arizona. Human smugglers are cutting sections of the border wall faster than they can be repaired and pushing groups of up to a hundred at a time into the U.S. causing CBP to close the nearby Lukeville legal point of entry and redirect officers to help Border Patrol agents process the huge volume of people camped out in the desert. The Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument has been overrun with trash and human waste strewn everywhere in a UNESCO biosphere reserve and place of huge natural beauty.
Photo: As night falls on Tuesday, December 5, migrants build fires to stay warm in the cold of the desert where many will spend the night.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Thousands of migrants overwhelm border officials in Arizona LUKEVILLE, ARIZONA, USA - December 5, 2023:
A huge surge of thousands of mostly African migrants have overwhelmed border officials in the tiny border town of Lukeville, Arizona. Human smugglers are cutting sections of the border wall faster than they can be repaired and pushing groups of up to a hundred at a time into the U.S. causing CBP to close the nearby Lukeville legal point of entry and redirect officers to help Border Patrol agents process the huge volume of people camped out in the desert. The Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument has been overrun with trash and human waste strewn everywhere in a UNESCO biosphere reserve and place of huge natural beauty.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Thousands of migrants overwhelm border officials in Arizona LUKEVILLE, ARIZONA, USA - December 5, 2023:
A huge surge of thousands of mostly African migrants have overwhelmed border officials in the tiny border town of Lukeville, Arizona. Human smugglers are cutting sections of the border wall faster than they can be repaired and pushing groups of up to a hundred at a time into the U.S. causing CBP to close the nearby Lukeville legal point of entry and redirect officers to help Border Patrol agents process the huge volume of people camped out in the desert. The Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument has been overrun with trash and human waste strewn everywhere in a UNESCO biosphere reserve and place of huge natural beauty.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Thousands of migrants overwhelm border officials in Arizona LUKEVILLE, ARIZONA, USA - December 5, 2023:
A huge surge of thousands of mostly African migrants have overwhelmed border officials in the tiny border town of Lukeville, Arizona. Human smugglers are cutting sections of the border wall faster than they can be repaired and pushing groups of up to a hundred at a time into the U.S. causing CBP to close the nearby Lukeville legal point of entry and redirect officers to help Border Patrol agents process the huge volume of people camped out in the desert. The Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument has been overrun with trash and human waste strewn everywhere in a UNESCO biosphere reserve and place of huge natural beauty.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Thousands of migrants overwhelm border officials in Arizona LUKEVILLE, ARIZONA, USA - December 5, 2023:
A huge surge of thousands of mostly African migrants have overwhelmed border officials in the tiny border town of Lukeville, Arizona. Human smugglers are cutting sections of the border wall faster than they can be repaired and pushing groups of up to a hundred at a time into the U.S. causing CBP to close the nearby Lukeville legal point of entry and redirect officers to help Border Patrol agents process the huge volume of people camped out in the desert. The Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument has been overrun with trash and human waste strewn everywhere in a UNESCO biosphere reserve and place of huge natural beauty.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Thousands of migrants overwhelm border officials in Arizona LUKEVILLE, ARIZONA, USA - December 5, 2023:
A huge surge of thousands of mostly African migrants have overwhelmed border officials in the tiny border town of Lukeville, Arizona. Human smugglers are cutting sections of the border wall faster than they can be repaired and pushing groups of up to a hundred at a time into the U.S. causing CBP to close the nearby Lukeville legal point of entry and redirect officers to help Border Patrol agents process the huge volume of people camped out in the desert. The Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument has been overrun with trash and human waste strewn everywhere in a UNESCO biosphere reserve and place of huge natural beauty.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Thousands of migrants overwhelm border officials in Arizona LUKEVILLE, ARIZONA, USA - December 5, 2023:
A huge surge of thousands of mostly African migrants have overwhelmed border officials in the tiny border town of Lukeville, Arizona. Human smugglers are cutting sections of the border wall faster than they can be repaired and pushing groups of up to a hundred at a time into the U.S. causing CBP to close the nearby Lukeville legal point of entry and redirect officers to help Border Patrol agents process the huge volume of people camped out in the desert. The Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument has been overrun with trash and human waste strewn everywhere in a UNESCO biosphere reserve and place of huge natural beauty.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Thousands of migrants overwhelm border officials in Arizona LUKEVILLE, ARIZONA, USA - December 5, 2023:
A huge surge of thousands of mostly African migrants have overwhelmed border officials in the tiny border town of Lukeville, Arizona. Human smugglers are cutting sections of the border wall faster than they can be repaired and pushing groups of up to a hundred at a time into the U.S. causing CBP to close the nearby Lukeville legal point of entry and redirect officers to help Border Patrol agents process the huge volume of people camped out in the desert. The Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument has been overrun with trash and human waste strewn everywhere in a UNESCO biosphere reserve and place of huge natural beauty.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Thousands of migrants overwhelm border officials in Arizona LUKEVILLE, ARIZONA, USA - December 5, 2023:
A huge surge of thousands of mostly African migrants have overwhelmed border officials in the tiny border town of Lukeville, Arizona. Human smugglers are cutting sections of the border wall faster than they can be repaired and pushing groups of up to a hundred at a time into the U.S. causing CBP to close the nearby Lukeville legal point of entry and redirect officers to help Border Patrol agents process the huge volume of people camped out in the desert. The Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument has been overrun with trash and human waste strewn everywhere in a UNESCO biosphere reserve and place of huge natural beauty.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Thousands of migrants overwhelm border officials in Arizona LUKEVILLE, ARIZONA, USA - December 5, 2023:
A huge surge of thousands of mostly African migrants have overwhelmed border officials in the tiny border town of Lukeville, Arizona. Human smugglers are cutting sections of the border wall faster than they can be repaired and pushing groups of up to a hundred at a time into the U.S. causing CBP to close the nearby Lukeville legal point of entry and redirect officers to help Border Patrol agents process the huge volume of people camped out in the desert. The Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument has been overrun with trash and human waste strewn everywhere in a UNESCO biosphere reserve and place of huge natural beauty.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Texas DPS Aircraft Operations Division Patrol EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - November 3, 2023:
The Texas Department of Public Safety invited DailyMail.com along for exclusive night patrols with the Aircraft Operations Division in El Paso, Texas, where helicopters piloted by State Troopers are supporting Texas governor Greg Abbott’s Operation Lone Star mission.
Photo: A Border Patrol agent chases a couple of ‘runners’ - immigrants who have entered the country illegally and are attempted to evade capture.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Texas DPS Aircraft Operations Division Patrol EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - November 3, 2023:
The Texas Department of Public Safety invited DailyMail.com along for exclusive night patrols with the Aircraft Operations Division in El Paso, Texas, where helicopters piloted by State Troopers are supporting Texas governor Greg Abbott’s Operation Lone Star mission.
Photo: A ‘runner’ surrenders to a Border Patrol agent in the desert near El Paso.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Texas DPS Aircraft Operations Division Patrol EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - November 3, 2023:
The Texas Department of Public Safety invited DailyMail.com along for exclusive night patrols with the Aircraft Operations Division in El Paso, Texas, where helicopters piloted by State Troopers are supporting Texas governor Greg Abbott’s Operation Lone Star mission.
Photo: GV of the border fence between the U.S. and Mexico near El Paso.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Texas DPS Aircraft Operations Division Patrol EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - November 3, 2023:
The Texas Department of Public Safety invited DailyMail.com along for exclusive night patrols with the Aircraft Operations Division in El Paso, Texas, where helicopters piloted by State Troopers are supporting Texas governor Greg Abbott’s Operation Lone Star mission.
Photo: GV of the border fence between the U.S. and Mexico near El Paso.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Texas DPS Aircraft Operations Division Patrol EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - November 3, 2023:
The Texas Department of Public Safety invited DailyMail.com along for exclusive night patrols with the Aircraft Operations Division in El Paso, Texas, where helicopters piloted by State Troopers are supporting Texas governor Greg Abbott’s Operation Lone Star mission.
Photo: A group of ‘runners’ or immigrants trying to evade law enforcement at the top of Mount Cristo Rey after crossing the border into the U.S. illegally.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Texas DPS Aircraft Operations Division Patrol EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - November 3, 2023:
The Texas Department of Public Safety invited DailyMail.com along for exclusive night patrols with the Aircraft Operations Division in El Paso, Texas, where helicopters piloted by State Troopers are supporting Texas governor Greg Abbott’s Operation Lone Star mission.
Photo: A group of ‘runners’ or immigrants trying to evade law enforcement at the top of Mount Cristo Rey after crossing the border into the U.S. illegally.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Texas DPS Aircraft Operations Division Patrol EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - November 3, 2023:
The Texas Department of Public Safety invited DailyMail.com along for exclusive night patrols with the Aircraft Operations Division in El Paso, Texas, where helicopters piloted by State Troopers are supporting Texas governor Greg Abbott’s Operation Lone Star mission.
Photo: A group of ‘runners’ or immigrants trying to evade law enforcement hide at the top of Mount Cristo Rey after crossing the border into the U.S. illegally.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Texas DPS Aircraft Operations Division Patrol EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - November 3, 2023:
The Texas Department of Public Safety invited DailyMail.com along for exclusive night patrols with the Aircraft Operations Division in El Paso, Texas, where helicopters piloted by State Troopers are supporting Texas governor Greg Abbott’s Operation Lone Star mission.
Photo: A group of ‘runners’ are spotted by the DPS helicopter which uses its spotlight to help agents on the ground locate them.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Texas DPS Aircraft Operations Division Patrol EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - November 3, 2023:
The Texas Department of Public Safety invited DailyMail.com along for exclusive night patrols with the Aircraft Operations Division in El Paso, Texas, where helicopters piloted by State Troopers are supporting Texas governor Greg Abbott’s Operation Lone Star mission.
Photo: The tactical flight officer scans the terrain using the helicopter’s cameras.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Texas DPS Aircraft Operations Division Patrol EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - November 3, 2023:
The Texas Department of Public Safety invited DailyMail.com along for exclusive night patrols with the Aircraft Operations Division in El Paso, Texas, where helicopters piloted by State Troopers are supporting Texas governor Greg Abbott’s Operation Lone Star mission.
Photo: A GV of the border between downtown El Paso and Ciudad Juárez, Mexico.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants surge at the US border EAGLE PASS, TEXAS, USA - September 30, 2023:
Dramatic photos show the moment migrants cross the Rio Grande river from Piedras Negras, Mexico into Eagle Pass, Texas. The migrants, mostly from Venezuela, then wait on the banks of the US side of the river until Border Patrol arrive to cut open the razor wire fence installed by Texas National Guard troopers. When DailyMail.com visited Saturday morning, some migrants had been waiting on the riverbank since 9pm the previous night.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants surge at the US border EAGLE PASS, TEXAS, USA - September 30, 2023:
Dramatic photos show the moment migrants cross the Rio Grande river from Piedras Negras, Mexico into Eagle Pass, Texas. The migrants, mostly from Venezuela, then wait on the banks of the US side of the river until Border Patrol arrive to cut open the razor wire fence installed by Texas National Guard troopers. When DailyMail.com visited Saturday morning, some migrants had been waiting on the riverbank since 9pm the previous night.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants surge at the US border EAGLE PASS, TEXAS, USA - September 30, 2023:
Dramatic photos show the moment migrants cross the Rio Grande river from Piedras Negras, Mexico into Eagle Pass, Texas. The migrants, mostly from Venezuela, then wait on the banks of the US side of the river until Border Patrol arrive to cut open the razor wire fence installed by Texas National Guard troopers. When DailyMail.com visited Saturday morning, some migrants had been waiting on the riverbank since 9pm the previous night.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants surge at the US border EAGLE PASS, TEXAS, USA - September 30, 2023:
Dramatic photos show the moment migrants cross the Rio Grande river from Piedras Negras, Mexico into Eagle Pass, Texas. The migrants, mostly from Venezuela, then wait on the banks of the US side of the river until Border Patrol arrive to cut open the razor wire fence installed by Texas National Guard troopers. When DailyMail.com visited Saturday morning, some migrants had been waiting on the riverbank since 9pm the previous night.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants surge at the US border EAGLE PASS, TEXAS, USA - September 30, 2023:
Dramatic photos show the moment migrants cross the Rio Grande river from Piedras Negras, Mexico into Eagle Pass, Texas. The migrants, mostly from Venezuela, then wait on the banks of the US side of the river until Border Patrol arrive to cut open the razor wire fence installed by Texas National Guard troopers. When DailyMail.com visited Saturday morning, some migrants had been waiting on the riverbank since 9pm the previous night.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants surge at the US border EAGLE PASS, TEXAS, USA - September 30, 2023:
Dramatic photos show the moment migrants cross the Rio Grande river from Piedras Negras, Mexico into Eagle Pass, Texas. The migrants, mostly from Venezuela, then wait on the banks of the US side of the river until Border Patrol arrive to cut open the razor wire fence installed by Texas National Guard troopers. When DailyMail.com visited Saturday morning, some migrants had been waiting on the riverbank since 9pm the previous night.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants surge at the US border EAGLE PASS, TEXAS, USA - September 30, 2023:
Dramatic photos show the moment migrants cross the Rio Grande river from Piedras Negras, Mexico into Eagle Pass, Texas. The migrants, mostly from Venezuela, then wait on the banks of the US side of the river until Border Patrol arrive to cut open the razor wire fence installed by Texas National Guard troopers. When DailyMail.com visited Saturday morning, some migrants had been waiting on the riverbank since 9pm the previous night.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants surge at the US border EAGLE PASS, TEXAS, USA - September 30, 2023:
Dramatic photos show the moment migrants cross the Rio Grande river from Piedras Negras, Mexico into Eagle Pass, Texas. The migrants, mostly from Venezuela, then wait on the banks of the US side of the river until Border Patrol arrive to cut open the razor wire fence installed by Texas National Guard troopers. When DailyMail.com visited Saturday morning, some migrants had been waiting on the riverbank since 9pm the previous night.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants surge at the US border EAGLE PASS, TEXAS, USA - September 30, 2023:
Dramatic photos show the moment migrants cross the Rio Grande river from Piedras Negras, Mexico into Eagle Pass, Texas. The migrants, mostly from Venezuela, then wait on the banks of the US side of the river until Border Patrol arrive to cut open the razor wire fence installed by Texas National Guard troopers. When DailyMail.com visited Saturday morning, some migrants had been waiting on the riverbank since 9pm the previous night.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants surge at the US border EAGLE PASS, TEXAS, USA - September 30, 2023:
Dramatic photos show the moment migrants cross the Rio Grande river from Piedras Negras, Mexico into Eagle Pass, Texas. The migrants, mostly from Venezuela, then wait on the banks of the US side of the river until Border Patrol arrive to cut open the razor wire fence installed by Texas National Guard troopers. When DailyMail.com visited Saturday morning, some migrants had been waiting on the riverbank since 9pm the previous night.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants surge at the US border EAGLE PASS, TEXAS, USA - September 29, 2023:
Migrants cross the Rio Grande river from Piedras Negras, Mexico into Eagle Pass, Texas.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants surge at the US border EAGLE PASS, TEXAS, USA - September 29, 2023:
Migrants cross the Rio Grande river from Piedras Negras, Mexico into Eagle Pass, Texas.
Photo: Migrants on an island halfway between the US and Mexico in the river.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants surge at the US border EAGLE PASS, TEXAS, USA - September 28, 2023:
Migrants cross the Rio Grande river from Piedras Negras, Mexico into Eagle Pass, Texas.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants surge at the US border EAGLE PASS, TEXAS, USA - September 28, 2023:
Migrants cross the Rio Grande river from Piedras Negras, Mexico into Eagle Pass, Texas.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants arrive at Texas border amid surge EAGLE PASS, TEXAS, USA - September 27, 2023:
Migrants cross the Rio Grande river border from Piedras Negras, Mexico, into the United States and climb up onto the banks on the Texas side where US military troops were preventing the migrants from passing through the razor wire.
The migrants were predominantly from Venezuela and eventually made their way past the wire and towards Border Patrol agents for processing, after an intense thunderstorm.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants arrive at Texas border amid surge EAGLE PASS, TEXAS, USA - September 27, 2023:
Migrants cross the Rio Grande river border from Piedras Negras, Mexico, into the United States and climb up onto the banks on the Texas side where US military troops were preventing the migrants from passing through the razor wire.
The migrants were predominantly from Venezuela and eventually made their way past the wire and towards Border Patrol agents for processing, after an intense thunderstorm.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants arrive at Texas border amid surge EAGLE PASS, TEXAS, USA - September 27, 2023:
Migrants cross the Rio Grande river border from Piedras Negras, Mexico, into the United States and climb up onto the banks on the Texas side where US military troops were preventing the migrants from passing through the razor wire.
The migrants were predominantly from Venezuela and eventually made their way past the wire and towards Border Patrol agents for processing, after an intense thunderstorm.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants arrive at Texas border amid surge EAGLE PASS, TEXAS, USA - September 27, 2023:
Migrants cross the Rio Grande river border from Piedras Negras, Mexico, into the United States and climb up onto the banks on the Texas side where US military troops were preventing the migrants from passing through the razor wire.
The migrants were predominantly from Venezuela and eventually made their way past the wire and towards Border Patrol agents for processing, after an intense thunderstorm.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants arrive at Texas border amid surge EAGLE PASS, TEXAS, USA - September 27, 2023:
Migrants cross the Rio Grande river border from Piedras Negras, Mexico, into the United States and climb up onto the banks on the Texas side where US military troops were preventing the migrants from passing through the razor wire.
The migrants were predominantly from Venezuela and eventually made their way past the wire and towards Border Patrol agents for processing, after an intense thunderstorm.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants arrive at Texas border amid surge EAGLE PASS, TEXAS, USA - September 27, 2023:
Migrants cross the Rio Grande river border from Piedras Negras, Mexico, into the United States and climb up onto the banks on the Texas side where US military troops were preventing the migrants from passing through the razor wire.
The migrants were predominantly from Venezuela and eventually made their way past the wire and towards Border Patrol agents for processing, after an intense thunderstorm.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants arrive at Texas border amid surge EAGLE PASS, TEXAS, USA - September 27, 2023:
Migrants cross the Rio Grande river border from Piedras Negras, Mexico, into the United States and climb up onto the banks on the Texas side where US military troops were preventing the migrants from passing through the razor wire.
The migrants were predominantly from Venezuela and eventually made their way past the wire and towards Border Patrol agents for processing, after an intense thunderstorm.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants arrive at Texas border amid surge EAGLE PASS, TEXAS, USA - September 11, 2023:
A floating buoy wall in the Rio Grande between the United States and Mexico that was installed by the state of Texas as part of Operation Lone Star.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants arrive at Texas border amid surge EAGLE PASS, TEXAS, USA - September 11, 2023:
A floating buoy wall in the Rio Grande between the United States and Mexico that was installed by the state of Texas as part of Operation Lone Star.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants arrive at Texas border amid surge PIEDRAS NEGRAS, COAHUILA, MEXICO - September 8, 2023:
Migrants climb through a barrier of concertina wire and shipping containers on the Texas side of the Rio Grande river, having crossed the border from Piedras Negras in Mexico to Eagle Pass in the United States to claim asylum.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants arrive at Texas border amid surge PIEDRAS NEGRAS, COAHUILA, MEXICO - September 8, 2023:
Migrants climb through a barrier of concertina wire and shipping containers on the Texas side of the Rio Grande river, having crossed the border from Piedras Negras in Mexico to Eagle Pass in the United States to claim asylum.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants enter open gate in border wall LUKEVILLE, ARIZONA, USA - August 20, 2023:
Monsoon gates in the border wall near Lukeville, Arizona, have been welded open, allowing illegal migrants to simply walk into the United States through an open door. As these exclusive images show, metal plates have been welded to the upper right corners of the gate frames preventing them from being closed and Border Patrol agents are powerless to stop hundreds of migrants streaming into the country on the southern border in Arizona. Cartel coyotes drop van loads of migrants by the open gates on the Mexican side of the wall and direct them to walk through and follow the wall towards Lukeville through the Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument.
Photo: A group of migrants make a run for it as they enter the U.S. after being dropped off by a smuggler.
(Photo by James Breeden/Shutterstock for NY Post)
Migrants in El Paso EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - August 17, 2023:
Migrants, predominantly from Venezuela, gather to sleep inside the Rescue Mission of EL Paso. Single male migrants are lead to a cot in a temporary tent outside, away from women and children, as the shelter is over-capacity. Some migrants stay for a day or two, with the Rescue Mission helping them with transportation to bus stations or the airport, whilst other migrants stay at the shelter for weeks and months - having reached the United States but without a plan for where to head next.
Photo: Three late arrivals at the Rescue Mission shelter.
(Photo by James Breeden/Shutterstock)
The Train of Death SAMALAYUCA, MEXICO - August 15, 2023:
In Mexico migrants hoping to reach the United States ride La Bestia, also known as El Tren de la Muerte (the train of death).
(Photo by James Breeden)
The Train of Death SAMALAYUCA, MEXICO - August 15, 2023:
In Mexico migrants hoping to reach the United States ride La Bestia, also known as El Tren de la Muerte (the train of death).
(Photo by James Breeden)
The Train of Death SAMALAYUCA, MEXICO - August 15, 2023:
In Mexico migrants hoping to reach the United States ride La Bestia, also known as El Tren de la Muerte (the train of death).
(Photo by James Breeden)
The Train of Death SAMALAYUCA, MEXICO - August 15, 2023:
In Mexico migrants hoping to reach the United States ride La Bestia, also known as El Tren de la Muerte (the train of death).
(Photo by James Breeden)
Title 42 expires CUIDAD JUÁREZ, MEXICO - May 12, 2023:
Migrants from Venezuela are camped out on the streets of Ciudad Juárez in Mexico after Title 42, the U.S. pandemic-era immigration policy, expired last night.
Photo: Jeremy Davila, 21, from Venezuela is camping out on the streets of Ciudad Juárez, waiting for an appointment via the CBP One app to enter the U.S. legally.
(Photo by James Breeden for The Times)
Title 42 expires CUIDAD JUÁREZ, MEXICO - May 12, 2023:
As dawn breaks on the first day since Title 42, the pandemic-era immigration policy, expired last night, migrants who had already crossed into the United States continue to be processed by Border Patrol at Gate 42 in El Paso, Texas.
Photo: Migrants wait to enter a holding area near Gate 42 after crossing into the United States.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Title 42 expires CUIDAD JUÁREZ, MEXICO - May 12, 2023:
As dawn breaks on the first day since Title 42, the pandemic-era immigration policy, expired last night, migrants who had already crossed into the United States continue to be processed by Border Patrol at Gate 42 in El Paso, Texas.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Title 42 expires CUIDAD JUÁREZ, MEXICO - May 12, 2023:
As dawn breaks on the first day since Title 42, the pandemic-era immigration policy, expired last night, migrants who had already crossed into the United States continue to be processed by Border Patrol at Gate 42 in El Paso, Texas.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Title 42 expires CUIDAD JUÁREZ, MEXICO - May 12, 2023:
As dawn breaks on the first day since Title 42, the pandemic-era immigration policy, expired last night, migrants who had already crossed into the United States continue to be processed by Border Patrol at Gate 42 in El Paso, Texas.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Title 42 expires CUIDAD JUÁREZ, MEXICO - May 11, 2023:
Title 42, the pandemic-era immigration policy, expired tonight. Mexican National Guard soldiers and local police put on a show of force along the Rio Grande river border in Ciudad Juárez, which was matched by their counterparts on the U.S. side, and both sides patrolled up and down their respective sides of the border together.
Texas National Guard troops lined the razor wire to prevent any migrants who crossed the border from entering and so a small group of migrants gathered next to the river, unable to climb the bank.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Title 42 expires CUIDAD JUÁREZ, MEXICO - May 11, 2023:
Title 42, the pandemic-era immigration policy, expired tonight. Mexican National Guard soldiers and local police put on a show of force along the Rio Grande river border in Ciudad Juárez, which was matched by their counterparts on the U.S. side, and both sides patrolled up and down their respective sides of the border together.
Texas National Guard troops lined the razor wire to prevent any migrants who crossed the border from entering and so a small group of migrants gathered next to the river, unable to climb the bank.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Title 42 set to end this week CUIDAD JUÁREZ, MEXICO - May 10, 2023:
Migrants who crossed the Rio Grande river into the United States await processing by immigration officials during a vicious sandstorm in El Paso.
As the pandemic-era immigration policy known as Title 42 nears its end this week, more migrants are heading to the U.S.-Mexico border.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Title 42 set to end this week CUIDAD JUÁREZ, MEXICO - May 10, 2023:
Migrants who crossed the Rio Grande river into the United States await processing by immigration officials during a vicious sandstorm in El Paso.
As the pandemic-era immigration policy known as Title 42 nears its end this week, more migrants are heading to the U.S.-Mexico border.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Title 42 set to end this week CUIDAD JUÁREZ, MEXICO - May 10, 2023:
Migrants who crossed the Rio Grande river into the United States await processing by immigration officials during a vicious sandstorm in El Paso.
As the pandemic-era immigration policy known as Title 42 nears its end this week, more migrants are heading to the U.S.-Mexico border.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Title 42 set to end this week CUIDAD JUÁREZ, MEXICO - May 10, 2023:
Migrants who crossed the Rio Grande river into the United States await processing by immigration officials during a vicious sandstorm in El Paso.
As the pandemic-era immigration policy known as Title 42 nears its end this week, more migrants are heading to the U.S.-Mexico border.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Title 42 set to end this week CUIDAD JUÁREZ, MEXICO - May 10, 2023:
Migrants, mostly from Venezuela, make the dangerous journey north through Mexico to the U.S. border on ‘La Bestia’ (The Beast), also known as El Tren de la Muerte (The Train of Death). Migrants climb on top of freight cars and cling on for the final stretch of their journey from Chihuahua to Ciudad Juárez, which borders the Texas city of El Paso across the Rio Grande river that splits the two countries.
As the pandemic-era immigration policy known as Title 42 nears its end this week, more migrants are heading to the U.S.-Mexico border.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Title 42 set to end this week CUIDAD JUÁREZ, MEXICO - May 10, 2023:
Migrants, mostly from Venezuela, make the dangerous journey north through Mexico to the U.S. border on ‘La Bestia’ (The Beast), also known as El Tren de la Muerte (The Train of Death). Migrants climb on top of freight cars and cling on for the final stretch of their journey from Chihuahua to Ciudad Juárez, which borders the Texas city of El Paso across the Rio Grande river that splits the two countries.
As the pandemic-era immigration policy known as Title 42 nears its end this week, more migrants are heading to the U.S.-Mexico border.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Title 42 set to end this week CUIDAD JUÁREZ, MEXICO - May 10, 2023:
Migrants, mostly from Venezuela, make the dangerous journey north through Mexico to the U.S. border on ‘La Bestia’ (The Beast), also known as El Tren de la Muerte (The Train of Death). Migrants climb on top of freight cars and cling on for the final stretch of their journey from Chihuahua to Ciudad Juárez, which borders the Texas city of El Paso across the Rio Grande river that splits the two countries.
As the pandemic-era immigration policy known as Title 42 nears its end this week, more migrants are heading to the U.S.-Mexico border.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Title 42 set to end this week EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - May 9, 2023:
As the pandemic-era immigration policy known as Title 42 nears its end this week, more migrants are heading to the U.S.-Mexico border.
Photo: Hundreds of migrants pray together as they await processing by U.S. officials after crossing the Rio Grande river from Mexico into the United States.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Gaps in the Yuma border fence after shipping containers removed YUMA, ARIZONA, USA - January 10, 2023:
Former Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey’s shipping container wall has been removed from the gaps in the border wall around Yuma, Arizona.
Photo: A couple from Ecuador cross the Colorado River over the Morelos Dam from Mexico to arrive in the United States. Luis and Luisa Zumba, married for 22 years, arrived in Yuma after traveling through 7 countries on their journey north. After crossing the dam, led by a coyote, the couple surrendered to Border Patrol who took them into custody.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Gaps in the Yuma border fence after shipping containers removed YUMA, ARIZONA, USA - January 10, 2023:
Former Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey’s shipping container wall has been removed from the gaps in the border wall around Yuma, Arizona.
Photo: A group of migrants from Cuba and Guatemala enter the United States through a gap in the border wall in Yuma, Arizona, surrendering to Border Patrol agents to be processed.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Gaps in the Yuma border fence after shipping containers removed YUMA, ARIZONA, USA - January 10, 2023:
Former Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey’s shipping container wall has been removed from the gaps in the border wall around Yuma, Arizona.
Photo: A group of migrants from Cuba and Guatemala enter the United States through a gap in the border wall in Yuma, Arizona, surrendering to Border Patrol agents to be processed.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
El Paso prepares for President Biden's visit today EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - January 8, 2023:
Just a short distance from where President Biden was taking a stroll along a ‘sanitized’ stretch of the border fence in El Paso, migrants continued to cross the Rio Grande river into the United States. At one point the president’s motorcade passed by on a highway parallel to the border fence where more than a hundred migrants were waiting to be processed by Border Patrol after crossing into the United States illegally.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
El Paso prepares for President Biden's visit today EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - January 8, 2023:
Just a short distance from where President Biden was taking a stroll along a ‘sanitized’ stretch of the border fence in El Paso, migrants continued to cross the Rio Grande river into the United States. At one point the president’s motorcade passed by on a highway parallel to the border fence where more than a hundred migrants were waiting to be processed by Border Patrol after crossing into the United States illegally.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
El Paso cleans up ahead of President Biden's visit EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - January 6, 2023:
The city of El Paso in Texas has been clearing migrants who have been camped out on its streets ahead of a presidential visit by Joe Biden to witness the situation at the border.
Photo: GVs from outside the Sacred Heart church, where migrants are camping out as a sanctuary against Border Patrol agents who have been rounding up undocumented people in the city ahead of President Biden’s visit.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)
Migrants arrive in Jacumba Hot Springs JACUMBA HOT SPRINGS, CALIFORNIA, USA - June 10, 2024:
Migrants from around the world continue to arrive across the U.S. southern border near Jacumba Hot Springs, California. After crossing the border from Mexico migrants from countries including Sudan, Mauritania, India, China, Iran as well as many Latin American countries wait for Border Patrol to transport them for processing.
Photo: Carlos Alberto Alzate Moncayo, 27, from Cali, Colombia, poses for a portrait as he waits for Border Patrol to take him into custody.
(Photo by James Breeden for the New York Post)
Migrants arrive in Jacumba Hot Springs JACUMBA HOT SPRINGS, CALIFORNIA, USA - June 10, 2024:
Migrants from around the world continue to arrive across the U.S. southern border near Jacumba Hot Springs, California. After crossing the border from Mexico migrants from countries including Sudan, Mauritania, India, China, Iran as well as many Latin American countries wait for Border Patrol to transport them for processing.
Photo: Migrants board a transportation bus
(Photo by James Breeden for the New York Post)
Migrants arrive in Jacumba Hot Springs JACUMBA HOT SPRINGS, CALIFORNIA, USA - June 10, 2024:
Migrants from around the world continue to arrive across the U.S. southern border near Jacumba Hot Springs, California. After crossing the border from Mexico migrants from countries including Sudan, Mauritania, India, China, Iran as well as many Latin American countries wait for Border Patrol to transport them for processing.
Photo: A Border Patrol bus arrives to transport people.
(Photo by James Breeden for the New York Post)
Migrants arrive in Jacumba Hot Springs JACUMBA HOT SPRINGS, CALIFORNIA, USA - June 10, 2024:
Migrants from around the world continue to arrive across the U.S. southern border near Jacumba Hot Springs, California. After crossing the border from Mexico migrants from countries including Sudan, Mauritania, India, China, Iran as well as many Latin American countries wait for Border Patrol to transport them for processing.
(Photo by James Breeden for the New York Post)
Turkish migrants fall from wall IMPERIAL BEACH, CALIFORNIA, USA - June 8, 2024:
This is the dramatic scene after two Turkish men fell from the border wall and broke their legs in Imperial Beach while crossing from Mexico. The group of four men from Turkey told the New York Post that they traveled from Turkey to Cancun, Mexico, before flying on to Tijuana. They paid people smugglers to cross the border, and after climbing the coyote’s ladder over the border wall two of the men fell, one of the men said both his legs were broken and the other man said one of his legs was broken. US EMS crews rescued the men, which the NY Post was not able to witness after being apprehended by Mexican migration officials and removed from the scene.
(Photo by James Breeden for the New York Post)
Migrants cross the border in Jacumba JACUMBA, CALIFORNIA, USA - June 7, 2024:
Migrants await processing by Border Patrol after crossing the border near Jacumba Hot Springs in California.
(Photo by James Breeden for the New York Post)
Migrants cross the border in Jacumba JACUMBA, CALIFORNIA, USA - June 7, 2024:
Migrants await processing by Border Patrol after crossing the border near Jacumba Hot Springs in California.
(Photo by James Breeden for the New York Post)
Migrants cross the border in Jacumba JACUMBA, CALIFORNIA, USA - June 7, 2024:
Migrants await processing by Border Patrol after crossing the border near Jacumba Hot Springs in California.
(Photo by James Breeden for the New York Post)
Migrants cross the border in Jacumba JACUMBA, CALIFORNIA, USA - June 6, 2024:
Migrants await processing by Border Patrol after walking around the border fence near Jacumba Hot Springs in California.
(Photo by James Breeden for the New York Post)
Migrants cross the border in Jacumba JACUMBA, CALIFORNIA, USA - June 6, 2024:
Migrants await processing by Border Patrol after walking around the border fence near Jacumba Hot Springs in California.
(Photo by James Breeden for the New York Post)
Migrants cross the border in Jacumba JACUMBA, CALIFORNIA, USA - June 6, 2024:
Migrants await processing by Border Patrol after walking around the border fence near Jacumba Hot Springs in California.
(Photo by James Breeden for the New York Post)
Migrants cross the border in Jacumba JACUMBA, CALIFORNIA, USA - June 6, 2024:
Migrants await processing by Border Patrol after walking around the border fence near Jacumba Hot Springs in California.
(Photo by James Breeden for the New York Post)
ICE raids in Houston HOUSTON, TEXAS, USA - June 5, 2024:
ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations officers gathered early in the morning in Houston, Texas, for planned pre-dawn arrests of noncitizen criminal aliens, which resulted in the arrest of Rosvelt Arturo Sanchez Sanchez. A statement from ICE said:
“On June 5, fugitive operations officers from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) Houston Field Office apprehended Rosvelt Arturo Sanchez Sanchez, a 39-year-old unlawfully present Mexican national. Sanchez has illegally entered the U.S. on at least four occasions and has previously been removed to Mexico three times on April 14, 2011; July 6, 2012; and July 31, 2015. Sanchez also has an extensive criminal history in the U.S. to include convictions for disorderly conduct; possession of cocaine; driving under the influence; and assault of a family member.”
(Photo by James Breeden for the New York Post)
ICE raids in Houston HOUSTON, TEXAS, USA - June 5, 2024:
ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations officers gathered early in the morning in Houston, Texas, for planned pre-dawn arrests of noncitizen criminal aliens, which resulted in the arrest of Rosvelt Arturo Sanchez Sanchez. A statement from ICE said:
“On June 5, fugitive operations officers from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) Houston Field Office apprehended Rosvelt Arturo Sanchez Sanchez, a 39-year-old unlawfully present Mexican national. Sanchez has illegally entered the U.S. on at least four occasions and has previously been removed to Mexico three times on April 14, 2011; July 6, 2012; and July 31, 2015. Sanchez also has an extensive criminal history in the U.S. to include convictions for disorderly conduct; possession of cocaine; driving under the influence; and assault of a family member.”
(Photo by James Breeden for the New York Post)
Migrants cross from Guatemala into Mexico TAPACHULA, CHIAPAS, MEXICO - May 23, 2024:
Migrants cross the Suchiate River, the southernmost border between Guatemala and Mexico, as they head north towards the United States.
Photo: Migrants cross the river on makeshift rafts from Ayutla, Guatemala, into Ciudad Hidalgo, Mexico.
(Photo by James Breeden for The Telegraph)
Migrants cross from Guatemala into Mexico TAPACHULA, CHIAPAS, MEXICO - May 23, 2024:
Migrants cross the Suchiate river, the southernmost border between Guatemala and Mexico, as they head north towards the United States.
Photo: Migrant camps on the banks of the Suchiate river in Ciudad Hidalgo, Mexico.
(Photo by James Breeden for The Telegraph)
Migrants cross from Guatemala into Mexico TAPACHULA, CHIAPAS, MEXICO - May 23, 2024:
Migrants cross the Suchiate river, the southernmost border between Guatemala and Mexico, as they head north towards the United States.
Photo: Migrant camps on the banks of the Suchiate river in Ciudad Hidalgo, Mexico.
(Photo by James Breeden for The Telegraph)
Migrants cross from Guatemala into Mexico TAPACHULA, CHIAPAS, MEXICO - May 23, 2024:
Migrants cross the Suchiate River, the southernmost border between Guatemala and Mexico, as they head north towards the United States.
Photo: A coyote, or people smuggler, talks to The Telegraph.
(Photo by James Breeden for The Telegraph)
Migrants cross from Guatemala into Mexico TAPACHULA, CHIAPAS, MEXICO - May 23, 2024:
Migrants cross the Suchiate River, the southernmost border between Guatemala and Mexico, as they head north towards the United States.
Photo: Migrants cross the river on makeshift rafts from Ayutla, Guatemala, into Ciudad Hidalgo, Mexico.
(Photo by James Breeden for The Telegraph)
Migrants cross the border in Yuma YUMA, ARIZONA, USA - May 18, 2024:
Unused sections of Trump’s border wall still lay uncompleted next to the border in Yuma, Arizona.
(Photo by James Breeden for New York Post)
Migrants cross the border in Yuma YUMA, ARIZONA, USA - May 16, 2024:
A group of migrants from countries including Bolivia and Brazil are apprehended by Border Patrol agents after crossing into the United States in Yuma, Arizona.
(Photo by James Breeden for New York Post)
Migrants cross the border in Yuma YUMA, ARIZONA, USA - May 16, 2024:
A group of migrants from countries including Bolivia and Brazil are apprehended by Border Patrol agents after crossing into the United States in Yuma, Arizona.
(Photo by James Breeden for New York Post)
Migrants cross the border in Yuma YUMA, ARIZONA, USA - May 16, 2024:
A group of migrants from countries including Bolivia and Brazil are apprehended by Border Patrol agents after crossing into the United States in Yuma, Arizona.
(Photo by James Breeden for New York Post)
Migrants cross the border in Yuma YUMA, ARIZONA, USA - May 16, 2024:
A group of migrants from countries including Bolivia and Brazil are apprehended by Border Patrol agents after crossing into the United States in Yuma, Arizona.
(Photo by James Breeden for New York Post)
Migrants cross the border at Jacumba Hot Springs JACUMBA HOT SPRINGS, CALIFORNIA, USA - April 12, 2024:
Migrants walk around the border fence and into the United States in Jacumba Hot Springs, where they are detained by Border Patrol and prepared for processed for immigration intake.
(Photo by James Breeden for New York Post)
Migrants cross the border at Jacumba Hot Springs JACUMBA HOT SPRINGS, CALIFORNIA, USA - April 12, 2024:
Migrants walk around the border fence and into the United States in Jacumba Hot Springs, where they are detained by Border Patrol and prepared for processed for immigration intake.
(Photo by James Breeden for New York Post)
Migrants cross the border at Jacumba Hot Springs JACUMBA HOT SPRINGS, CALIFORNIA, USA - April 12, 2024:
Migrants walk around the border fence and into the United States in Jacumba Hot Springs, where they are detained by Border Patrol and prepared for processed for immigration intake.
(Photo by James Breeden for New York Post)
Migrants cross the border at Jacumba Hot Springs SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA, USA - April 12, 2024:
Migrants are released by Border Patrol at the Iris Avenue Transit Center.
(Photo by James Breeden for New York Post)
Chinese migrants detained after crossing CAMPO, CALIFORNIA, USA - April 11, 2024:
Chinese migrants crossed the border at Campo, a remote stretch of the Mountain Empire area of southeastern San Diego County. A Border Patrol agent kept watch over the group while awaiting transport to a processing site. The migrants told the NY Post their journey had taken many weeks from China and they were ultimately headed for New York.
(Photo by James Breeden for New York Post)
Chinese migrants detained after crossing CAMPO, CALIFORNIA, USA - April 11, 2024:
Chinese migrants crossed the border at Campo, a remote stretch of the Mountain Empire area of southeastern San Diego County. A Border Patrol agent kept watch over the group while awaiting transport to a processing site. The migrants told the NY Post their journey had taken many weeks from China and they were ultimately headed for New York.
(Photo by James Breeden for New York Post)
Chinese migrants detained after crossing CAMPO, CALIFORNIA, USA - April 11, 2024:
Chinese migrants crossed the border at Campo, a remote stretch of the Mountain Empire area of southeastern San Diego County. A Border Patrol agent kept watch over the group while awaiting transport to a processing site. The migrants told the NY Post their journey had taken many weeks from China and they were ultimately headed for New York.
(Photo by James Breeden for New York Post)
Migrants dropped off at Iris Transit Center SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA, USA - April 10, 2024:
Migrants are dropped off by Border Patrol at the Iris Transit Center in San Diego, California. The migrants are released at the transit hub after being detained by federal authorities and a team of NGO volunteers directs them to the nearby San Diego Trolley for onwards travel, mostly to the airport.
(Photo by James Breeden for New York Post)
Migrants dropped off at Iris Transit Center SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA, USA - April 9, 2024:
Migrants are dropped off by Border Patrol at the Iris Transit Center in San Diego, California. The migrants are released at the transit hub after being detained by federal authorities and a team of NGO volunteers directs them to the nearby San Diego Trolley for onwards travel, mostly to the airport.
(Photo by James Breeden for New York Post)
Texas National Guard 'pushes back' a huge number of migrants EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - March 26, 2024:
Texas National Guard pushed back a large group of almost 60 migrants who crossed the border illegally and breached the concertina wire barriers set up along the US side of the Rio Grande river. The migrants had made it to the actual border wall but were forced back across the razor wire defenses by soldiers telling them to enter the US at a legal point of entry to claim asylum, pointing to the Zaragoza bridge above them.
(Photo by James Breeden for NY Post)
Texas National Guard 'pushes back' a huge number of migrants EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - March 26, 2024:
Texas National Guard pushed back a large group of almost 60 migrants who crossed the border illegally and breached the concertina wire barriers set up along the US side of the Rio Grande river. The migrants had made it to the actual border wall but were forced back across the razor wire defenses by soldiers telling them to enter the US at a legal point of entry to claim asylum, pointing to the Zaragoza bridge above them.
(Photo by James Breeden for NY Post)
Texas National Guard 'pushes back' a huge number of migrants EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - March 26, 2024:
Texas National Guard pushed back a large group of almost 60 migrants who crossed the border illegally and breached the concertina wire barriers set up along the US side of the Rio Grande river. The migrants had made it to the actual border wall but were forced back across the razor wire defenses by soldiers telling them to enter the US at a legal point of entry to claim asylum, pointing to the Zaragoza bridge above them.
(Photo by James Breeden for NY Post)
Migrants continue to try to enter the US in El Paso EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - March 25, 2024:
Migrants continue to try to make it past the concertina wire fences and into the United States in El Paso, Texas. The Texas National Guard troops played a game of cat-and-mouse as groups of migrants probed gaps in the barrier.
Photo: Migrants cross back into Mexico after failing to find a way through the Texas defenses along the Rio Grande river.
(Photo by James Breeden for NY Post)
Migrants continue to try to enter the US in El Paso EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - March 25, 2024:
Migrants continue to try to make it past the concertina wire fences and into the United States in El Paso, Texas. The Texas National Guard troops played a game of cat-and-mouse as groups of migrants probed gaps in the barrier.
Photo: Migrants cross back into Mexico after failing to find a way through the Texas defenses along the Rio Grande river.
(Photo by James Breeden for NY Post)
Migrants continue to try to enter the US in El Paso EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - March 25, 2024:
Migrants continue to try to make it past the concertina wire fences and into the United States in El Paso, Texas. The Texas National Guard troops played a game of cat-and-mouse as groups of migrants probed gaps in the barrier.
Photo: A family in Ciudad Juárez looks over the river towards the US.
(Photo by James Breeden for NY Post)
Migrants continue to try to enter the US in El Paso EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - March 25, 2024:
Migrants continue to try to make it past the concertina wire fences and into the United States in El Paso, Texas. The Texas National Guard troops played a game of cat-and-mouse as groups of migrants probed gaps in the barrier.
Photo: A large hole was cut in the fence and some migrants made it through before National Guard troops arrived and blocked the gap. A pregnant woman seemingly spent a long time remonstrating with soldiers before eventually turning back in tears.
(Photo by James Breeden for NY Post)
Migrants continue to try to enter the US in El Paso EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - March 25, 2024:
Migrants continue to try to make it past the concertina wire fences and into the United States in El Paso, Texas. The Texas National Guard troops played a game of cat-and-mouse as groups of migrants probed gaps in the barrier.
Photo: A family crosses the Rio Grande river into the US.
(Photo by James Breeden for NY Post)
Migrants continue to try to enter the US in El Paso EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - March 25, 2024:
Migrants continue to try to make it past the concertina wire fences and into the United States in El Paso, Texas. The Texas National Guard troops played a game of cat-and-mouse as groups of migrants probed gaps in the barrier.
Photo: A family crosses the Rio Grande river into the US.
(Photo by James Breeden for NY Post)
Texas National Guard ‘push back’ migrants EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - March 24, 2024:
Texas National Guard troops ‘push back’ migrants who have crossed into the U.S. from Mexico and made it through the fences and concertina wire installed by the state.
Photo: A male migrant cuts a hole in a fence with bolt cutters.
(Photo by James Breeden for NY Post)
Texas National Guard ‘push back’ migrants EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - March 24, 2024:
Texas National Guard troops ‘push back’ migrants who have crossed into the U.S. from Mexico and made it through the fences and concertina wire installed by the state.
Photo: Migrants struggle in an intense dust storm on Sunday.
(Photo by James Breeden for NY Post)
Texas National Guard ‘push back’ migrants EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - March 24, 2024:
Texas National Guard troops ‘push back’ migrants who have crossed into the U.S. from Mexico and made it through the fences and concertina wire installed by the state.
Photo: Migrants struggle in an intense dust storm on Sunday.
(Photo by James Breeden for NY Post)
Texas National Guard ‘push back’ migrants EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - March 24, 2024:
Texas National Guard troops ‘push back’ migrants who have crossed into the U.S. from Mexico and made it through the fences and concertina wire installed by the state.
Photo: A migrant struggles through concertina-wire.
(Photo by James Breeden for NY Post)
Texas National Guard ‘push back’ migrants EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - March 24, 2024:
Texas National Guard troops ‘push back’ migrants who have crossed into the U.S. from Mexico and made it through the fences and concertina wire installed by the state.
Photo: A migrant struggles through concertina-wire.
(Photo by James Breeden for NY Post)
Texas beefs up security at the border in El Paso EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - March 22, 2024:
Texas officials beefed up security at the border in El Paso by deploying additional National Guard troops, State Troopers, and other law enforcement after migrants waiting in this area stormed the border fence yesterday.
(Photo by James Breeden for NY Post)
Texas beefs up security at the border in El Paso EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - March 22, 2024:
Texas officials beefed up security at the border in El Paso by deploying additional National Guard troops, State Troopers, and other law enforcement after migrants waiting in this area stormed the border fence yesterday.
(Photo by James Breeden for NY Post)
Texas beefs up security at the border in El Paso EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - March 22, 2024:
Texas officials beefed up security at the border in El Paso by deploying additional National Guard troops, State Troopers, and other law enforcement after migrants waiting in this area stormed the border fence yesterday.
(Photo by James Breeden for NY Post)
Texas beefs up security at the border in El Paso EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - March 22, 2024:
Texas officials beefed up security at the border in El Paso by deploying additional National Guard troops, State Troopers, and other law enforcement after migrants waiting in this area stormed the border fence yesterday.
(Photo by James Breeden for NY Post)
Texas law SB4 EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - March 21, 2024:
Migrants are seen waiting by the border fence in El Paso at Gate 31 hoping to be admitted into the United States after illegally crossing the Rio Grande river from Mexico. The National Guard troops attempted a ‘push back’ into Mexico which led to the male migrants storming the fence.
(Photo by James Breeden for NY Post)
Texas law SB4 EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - March 20, 2024:
Migrants continued to cross the Rio Grande river into the United States amid ongoing controversy over Texas law SB4. The migrants, predominantly from Colombia and Venezuela, crossed the Rio Grande river from Ciudad Juarez in Mexico into El Paso in Texas, USA.
(Photo by James Breeden/NY Post)
Texas law SB4 EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - March 20, 2024:
Migrants continued to cross the Rio Grande river into the United States amid ongoing controversy over Texas law SB4. The migrants, predominantly from Colombia and Venezuela, crossed the Rio Grande river from Ciudad Juarez in Mexico into El Paso in Texas, USA.
(Photo by James Breeden/NY Post)
Texas law SB4 EL PASO, TEXAS, USA - March 20, 2024:
Migrants continued to cross the Rio Grande river into the United States amid ongoing controversy over Texas law SB4. The migrants, predominantly from Colombia and Venezuela, crossed the Rio Grande river from Ciudad Juarez in Mexico into El Paso in Texas, USA.
(Photo by James Breeden/NY Post)
Texas Shelby Park Standoff EAGLE PASS, TEXAS, USA - January 23, 2024:
Federal border patrol agents are in a standoff with Texas state troops at Shelby Park in Eagle Pass as the Biden Administration fights Texas Governor Greg Abbott in court for access to the Rio Grande river, which is the official border between the United States and Mexico.
Photo: Items of clothing and other personal effects discarded by illegal immigrants before they are taken into custody by Border Patrol agents.
HOLD FOR TOM LEONARD
(Photo by James Breeden for the Daily Mail)
Migrants cross from Guatemala into Mexico TAPACHULA, CHIAPAS, MEXICO - May 23, 2024:
Migrants cross the Suchiate river, the southernmost border between Guatemala and Mexico, as they head north towards the United States.
Photo: The Jesús el Buen Pastor del Pobre y Migrante hostel - a resting point for migrants in Tapachula.
(Photo by James Breeden for The Telegraph)
Migrants cross from Guatemala into Mexico TAPACHULA, CHIAPAS, MEXICO - May 23, 2024:
Migrants cross the Suchiate river, the southernmost border between Guatemala and Mexico, as they head north towards the United States.
Photo: Migrants arrived at a Mexican National Guard checkpoint and are allowed to pass.
(Photo by James Breeden for The Telegraph)
Thousands of migrants overwhelm border officials in Arizona LUKEVILLE, ARIZONA, USA - December 5, 2023:
A huge surge of thousands of mostly African migrants have overwhelmed border officials in the tiny border town of Lukeville, Arizona. Human smugglers are cutting sections of the border wall faster than they can be repaired and pushing groups of up to a hundred at a time into the U.S. causing CBP to close the nearby Lukeville legal point of entry and redirect officers to help Border Patrol agents process the huge volume of people camped out in the desert. The Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument has been overrun with trash and human waste strewn everywhere in a UNESCO biosphere reserve and place of huge natural beauty.
(Photo by James Breeden for DailyMail.com)