Border Patrol Records Another Record High of Apprehensions, Encounters at Southern Border in May

Crowd of immigrants
by Bethany Blankley

 

U.S. Customs and Border Patrol published official data Thursday for apprehensions and encounters May: the highest monthly total in recorded U.S. history of 239,416.

CBP published the data after The Center Square published preliminary numbers received from a Border Patrol agent.

Official numbers include both Border Patrol and Office of Field Operations data of people entering the U.S. illegally at all ports of entry.

Despite President Joe Biden, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas and CBP Chief Chris Magnus arguing that the border is closed, that Title 42 is being enforced, and that it is complying with the Remain in Mexico policy, more people entered the U.S. illegally in May 2022 than an any month recorded in U.S. history.

And the numbers are only going up.

In April, CBP reported 235,478 total encounters/apprehensions; in March, 222,239; in February, 165,902; in January, 154,816.

The last two months alone equals roughly the size of the population of Wyoming.

The southern border sectors that saw the most traffic last month, as in nearly all months, were in Texas in the Rio Grande Valley and Del Rio sectors.

The numbers are broken down by BP sector and categories, including apprehensions, turn backs, non-violations, outstanding, no-arrests, got aways (known/recorded), and deceased. Here are the numbers based on the preliminary data obtained by The Center Square.

RGV Sector

  • Apps – 46,527
  • TBs – 4,284
  • Got Aways (known/recorded) – 4,378
  • Unresolved Detection – 133
  • No Arrest – 2,887
  • Deceased – 15
  • Non-violation – 261
  • Outstanding – 18

Del Rio Sector

  • Apps – 45,662
  • TBs – 193
  • Got Aways (known/recorded) – 15,006
  • Unresolved Detection – 168
  • No Arrest – 3,736
  • Deceased -26
  • Non-violation -176
  • Outstanding -58

Yuma Sector

  • Apps – 36,568
  • TBs – 204
  • Got Aways (known/recorded) – 3,007
  • Unresolved Detection – 20
  • No Arrest – 62
  • Deceased – 9
  • Non-violation -54
  • Outstanding – 63

El Paso Sector

  • Apps – 35,650
  • TBs – 3,104
  • Got Aways (known/recorded) – 9,856
  • Unresolved Detection – 31
  • No Arrest – 225
  • Deceased -0
  • Non-violation -104
  • Outstanding -25

Tucson Sector

  • Apps – 27,554
  • TBs – 995
  • Got Aways (known/recorded) – 18,612
  • Unresolved Detection – 1,655
  • No Arrest – 3,344
  • Deceased – 12
  • Non-violation – 202
  • Outstanding – 399

San Diego Sector

  • Apps – 17,797
  • TBs – 756
  • Got Aways (known/recorded) -5,437
  • Unresolved Detection – 4
  • No Arrest – 5,301
  • Deceased – 1
  • Non-violation – 7
  • Outstanding – 150

Laredo Sector

  • Apps – 12,297
  • TBs – 2,601
  • Got Aways (known/recorded) – 3,113
  • Unresolved Detection – 45
  • No Arrest – 1,134
  • Deceased – 11
  • Non-violation – 246
  • Outstanding – 0

El Centro Sector

  • Apps – 7,264
  • TBs – 407
  • Got Aways (known/recorded) – 679
  • Unresolved Detection – 4
  • No Arrest – 5
  • Deceased – 0
  • Non-violation – 2
  • Outstanding – 5

Big Bend Sector

  • Apps – 3,309
  • TBs – 54
  • Got Aways (known/recorded) – 1,521
  • Unresolved Detection – 41
  • No Arrest – 184
  • Deceased – 5
  • Non-violation – 22
  • Outstanding – 69

Apprehensions include those in the U.S. illegally who surrender or are caught by BP officers. Turn backs include those who entered illegally but returned to Mexico.

The categories of “no arrests” and “unresolved detection” aren’t part of 6 U.S. Code, which classifies how encounters are to be reported. These categories are used as a way to lower the number of got-aways being reported, the BP officer says.

No arrests mean someone “was detected in a non-border zone and their presence didn’t affect Got-Away statistics,” according to the official internal tracking system definition used by agents to record data. “Unresolved detection” means the same thing, but the officers, for a range of reasons, couldn’t determine citizenship.

Non-violations are “deemed to have committed no infraction and don’t affect Got-Away statistics,” according to the tracking system definition.

The categories of non-violations, no arrests and unresolved detection should actually be categorized as got-aways, the BP officer says, assuming all non-arrests were of non-citizens.

Preliminary data in other sectors show more than 1,600 people were apprehended in May, with Miami apprehending the most.

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Bethany Blankley is a contributor to The Center Square. 

 

 

 

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