CBS News
Border Patrol chief says tougher policies are needed to deter migrants from entering U.S. illegally
Washington — In an interview on Thursday with CBS News, Border Patrol chief Jason Owens said the U.S. government needs to implement tougher immigration policies, including by jailing migrants, to deter unlawful crossings along the southern border.
“I think we need to take a look at the asylum laws and make it where only people that have a legitimate claim can claim asylum,” Owens said in his first sit-down interview in English since assuming the top role at Border Patrol in June 2023. “I think that we need to be able to enforce the immigration laws that are on the books and hold people accountable whenever they choose to break the law.”
Asked if was referring to tougher federal policies, Owens said, “Yes.”
“If there’s no motivation to do it the right way, and the right way, it is causing people to have to wait a little bit longer,” Owens said. “Naturally, they’re going to choose to come between the ports of entry. We need to take that off the table and make sure everybody’s coming through the front door.”
During the interview inside Customs and Border Protection headquarters in Washington, Owens said Border Patrol, which is under CBP, needs more resources and the ability to impose higher “consequences” for migrants who cross the U.S.-Mexico border without authorization.
“I’m talking about jail time. I’m talking about being removed from the country and I’m talking about being banned from being able to come back because you chose to come in the illegal way instead of the established lawful pathways that we set for you,” he said.
Over the past three years, Owens’ agency has reported record levels of migrant apprehensions along the southern border, including more than 2 million in each of the past fiscal years.
Owens also made his first comments on SB4, a Texas immigration law that would allow state and local officials in the Lone Star State to arrest, jail and prosecute migrants. The law, which is being challenged by the Biden administration, was again put on hold by a federal appeals court earlier this week.
Owens said the law is “not going to stop us from doing our job,” and that there is “no better partner for the Border Patrol than the Texas Department of Public Safety.”
“We have worked hand in hand with that agency for as long as I’ve been around and I don’t see that ever stopping. They have always been very good at complementing our mission,” Owens added. “They back us up when we’re out in the field, and we do for them as well. So whatever the laws are that they’re going to be enforcing, our mission remains constant. Their mission remains constant.”
CBS News
Yawning isn’t just for humans. Here’s why fish, birds and other animals yawn too, according to an expert.
Humans aren’t alone when it comes to yawning — all vertebrates do it too, including fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals. But why?
The “evolutionarily ancient” act of yawning likely serves a few purposes, according to Andrew Gallup, a professor of behavioral biology at Johns Hopkins University.
“The fact that it is conserved so widely across the animal kingdom suggests that it likely holds an evolutionary function, and research suggests that it functions in a variety of domains,” he said on “CBS Mornings Plus” Friday.
Those findings suggest yawning may have a role in promoting changes in our state of alertness or activity patterns.
“We often yawn frequently before we go to sleep or after we wake up,” Gallup said. “Yawns have been shown to increase arousal and alertness as associated with these state changes.”
Research also suggests yawning has a brain-cooling function.
“One of the mechanisms that could facilitate changes in state or heightened arousal as a result of yawning is brain cooling,” Gallup said.
Brain cooling refers to cooling the temperature of the brain, he said, and this can help us feel calmer, “because stress and anxiety increase brain temperature and also trigger yawning.”
Gallup also said he isn’t insulted when someone yawns, because it’s both contagious and a common, natural mechanism.
“It helps promote mental awareness and alertness. So when individuals yawn in an academic setting or a boardroom, it could be an indicator that they’re actually trying to pay attention,” he said.
CBS News
President-elect Trump discusses possible shutdown in exclusive phone interview
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New hope for missing journalist Austin Tice as U.S. officials visit Damascus
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