-
U.S. Border Patrol recorded 124,220 encounters between ports of entry along the southwest border last month, down 42% from December 2023 and is the lowest recorded so far during this fiscal year.
-
Some immigrant rights groups say their members need to have a plan in case they're stopped by police after Senate Bill 4 is signed into law. Others say they plan to sue the state to keep the law from taking effect.
-
Texas Congressional leaders, LULAC say they'll challenge Senate Bill 4 and Mexico says it rejects legislation.
-
A decade or so ago, migrants coming to the U.S.-Mexico border were mostly Mexican males. Today, the makeup of migrants who want to cross the border is much more diverse.
-
Mexico’s president said Tuesday the fire started after some migrants set mattresses on fire inside the facility.
-
As El Pasoans prepare for President Biden's first visit to the border, some say his trip won't have an immediate effect on the migrant crisis the city has been grappling with.
-
An analysis by The Texas Newsroom found a 36% increase in the demand for foreign workers in the state in just one year.
-
Volunteers in Dallas are still welcoming some migrants following the Supreme Court’s decision Monday to keep in place a Trump-era immigration policy, but they worry about the implications for migrants stuck at the border.
-
The Trump-era Title 42 immigration policy will not expire on Wednesday as expected, but El Paso will still bus migrants to cities including Dallas in as it tries to manage an influx of asylum seekers.
-
The number of migrant encounters at the Texas-Mexico border has climbed from 109,456 in March 2021, the month the mission began, to 116,976 in August — a failure of Abbott’s office’s stated desire to “stop this revolving door and deter others considering entering illegally.”
-
Attorneys for the Venezuelan migrants, who are suing Florida Gov. DeSantis after being transported from Texas to the Massachusetts island, said the consent forms migrants signed were missing material information and not fully translated.
-
The Trump-era policy required asylum seekers to wait for their immigration hearing in Mexico. The Biden administration suspended the program, but was blocked by the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.