DATA: Border Patrol agents apprehended more than 150,000 who illegally crossed between ports of entry during the first quarter of Fiscal Year 2019.



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150K Migrants Apprehended During 1st Quarter 2019 -- Up 84 Percent

22,782

File Photo: U.S. Border Patrol/El Paso Sector 4 Feb 2019
2,754


U. S. Border Patrol agents apprehended more than 150,000 migrants who illegally crossed between ports of entry during the first quarter of Fiscal Year 2019. Of those, nearly 100,000 consisted of families and unaccompanied minors.

For the third straight month, Border Patrol agents apprehended more than 50,000 migrants who crossed the border between ports of entry in December. During the first quarter of the new fiscal year, agents apprehended a total of 153,609 who illegally crossed the border, according to the December Southwest Border Migration report released Monday morning. The partial government shutdown delayed the release of the December report.
The apprehension of the more than 150,000 migrants represents nearly 40 percent of the total number of migrant apprehensions during the entire previous fiscal year. The first quarter apprehensions represent a nearly 84 percent increase over the prior year’s 1st quarter total of 83,568.
“These statistics are disturbing,” Center for Immigration Studies Director of Policy Studies Jessica Vaughan told Breitbart News Monday morning. “There can be no doubt that our catch and release policies are enticing people to trek through Mexico to our mostly unsecured border with a child in tow, so they will be allowed in to live here indefinitely.”
“It’s wrong for our government to maintain these policies, when they tempt people to make such dangerous choices that endanger their children and enrich criminal smuggling organizations on top of it,” Vaughan explained. “It’s wrong to impose the burden of supporting these families on American communities, where the schools, housing and welfare programs often are already stretched thin.”
The apprehension of Family Unit Aliens (FMUA) and Unaccompanied Alien Children (UAC) during the first quarter jumped to 90,807 — an increase of more than 190 percent over the same period last year, the report indicates. Looking at the FMUA apprehensions exclusively (75,794) shows a massive 280 percent increase over the prior year and represents more than 70 percent of the previous year’s entire FMUA apprehensions (107,212).
While the Rio Grande Valley Sector continues to see the largest number of FMUA apprehensions of the nine southwestern Border Patrol sectors, the El Paso Sector witnessed a massive 1,602 percent increase over the previous year’s first-quarter numbers, officials reported. Much of this is in the tiny section of the border known as the New Mexico Bootheel. Agents apprehended 1,114 family units in the El Paso Sector during December 2017. In December 2018, that number jumped to 18,957.
Six other Border Patrol sectors witnessed triple-digit percentage increases in the apprehension of family units, mostly Central American migrants, who crossed the border illegally in December 2018. Those sectors are: San Diego (667 percent), Del Rio (330 percent), El Centro (310 percent), Tucson (244 percent), Rio Grande Valley (178 percent), and Yuma (174 percent). The Laredo Sector only saw a 72 percent increase over the previous December and the Big Bend Sector actually saw a 50 percent decrease over the prior year.
Of the 75,794 migrant families apprehended during the first quarter of the fiscal year came to the U.S. mainly from Guatemala (38430), Honduras (27,180). and El Salvador (7,283). The families from these countries (72,893) represented 96 percent of all family units apprehended along the southwest border between ports of entry.
“Obviously Congress is not going to fix this problem,” Director Vaughan concluded. “The Democrats’ budget proposal would make it even worse. The wall is not the magic answer to this problem, either, although it would help.”
“The most sensible policy is the combination of a more secure border along with the new Migrant Protection Protocols, which provide for asylum seekers who are not facing danger in Mexico to remain there until their case winds through the immigration courts,” she said. “This will remove a big part of the incentive for them to come, and with more border infrastructure and manpower, then the ones who try to come in illegally will be more likely to be caught. ”
Editor’s Note: This article has been updated with additional comments from Jessica Vaughan, director of policy studies for the Center for Immigration Reform.
Bob Price serves as associate editor and senior political news contributor for the Breitbart Border team. He is an original member of the Breitbart Texas team. Follow him on Twitter @BobPriceBBTX and Facebook.

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