Townhall
New
Data on Border Crossings Could Change
Immigration Debate
by Byron York
Apr 16, 2013
There's
a confrontation coming between the
Obama administration and Republicans in Congress over the most basic
question
of immigration reform: How secure is the U.S. border with Mexico?
Not
only does the administration not know --
and perhaps doesn't want to know -- but there are signs the border is
less
secure than some of the most skeptical Republicans thought.
Last
year the Border Patrol began experimenting
with a new drone-based surveillance system that had been developed for
finding
Taliban fighters in Afghanistan. Starting in the fall, officials used
the
radar-based system over a fairly small portion of the Arizona border.
The
results were striking.
"According
to internal reports, Border
Patrol agents used the airborne radar to help find and detain 1,874
people in
the Sonora Desert between October 1 [2012] and January 17 [2013],"
reported the Los Angeles Times last week. "But the radar system spotted
an
additional 1,962 people in the same area who evaded arrest and
disappeared into
the United States."
That
means officers caught fewer than half of
those who made the crossing in that part of Arizona. If those results
are representative
of other sectors of the border, then everything the administration has
said
about border security is wrong.
"These
revelations are in stark contrast
to the administration's declaration that the border is more secure than
ever
due to greater resources having been deployed to the region, and that
lower
rates of apprehensions signify fewer individuals are crossing," Rep.
Michael McCaul, chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee,
wrote in an
April 5 letter to Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano.
"Since
the creation of DHS, Congress has
provided significant funding increases in the number of Border Patrol
agents,
the building of nearly 700 miles of fencing and the deployment of
advanced
technologies to increase the nation's ability to monitor the border,"
the
Texas Republican added. "However, we do not know if additional
resources
have produced better results."
For
years, Napolitano and other officials at
the Department of Homeland Security have pointed to the declining
number of
border apprehensions as proof that the total number of illegal
crossings is
also declining. Now, it could mean the administration just isn't
catching most
of the crossers...
Read
the rest of the article at Townhall
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