All quiet on the southern front: Border crisis is over after Trump policies enacted
'We are right now seeing an average of 50, the whole sector.'
EL PASO, Texas — Driving along the rugged paths on Mount Cristo Rey, you can see the many trails illegal aliens and smugglers took to get into the United States during the Biden-Harris administration. Border Patrol Agent Orlando Marrero-Rubio told Blaze Media that at that time, days were hectic as overstretched agents tried to keep up with the number of illegal crossings.
Today, agents in the Santa Teresa area of operation in the El Paso Sector are no longer encountering large groups of illegal immigrants giving themselves up and are hardly seeing attempted gotaways. The main reason, they say, is because agents are actually back to patrolling the border and are able to arrest the few people who are trying to sneak in.
It's a stunning reversal of what the region experienced during the Biden-Harris years. Everything from illegal aliens bum-rushing one of the ports of entry from the Mexican side to attacking U.S. National Guardsmen while storming the border to the streets lined with processed and released migrants due to lack of space, El Paso has been through the wringer.
The lack of illegal activity was of no surprise once President Donald Trump got back into the White House this year and re-enacted his policies that were undone by President Joe Biden. Trump's return was a day many in border towns were looking forward to, having been on the front lines of the years-long invasion.
"We were very busy in this area. ... We were averaging 2,500 to 2,700 apprehensions a day ... the whole sector. We are right now seeing an average of 50, the whole sector," Marrero-Rubio said as we stood near a camera unit on Cristo Rey.
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