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Illegal border crossings remain low amid concerns that election could end lull
Nogales, Arizona — The lull in illegal crossings at the U.S.-Mexico border continued in October, according to preliminary Customs and Border Protection figures obtained by CBS News. But officials worry that could be upended by the presidential election on Tuesday.
Border Patrol agents recorded nearly 57,000 apprehensions of migrants between legal entry points along the U.S. southern border in October, internal federal statistics show. That’s slightly up from 54,000 in September, and very similar to the 58,000 and 56,000 apprehensions tallied in August and July, respectively.
The last time monthly apprehensions were lower than the levels seen in the past four months was four years ago, in September 2020, when Border Patrol apprehended fewer than 55,000 migrants along the U.S.-Mexico border, according to historical CBP data.
CBP’s figures don’t include those processed at legal border entry points, where the Biden administration has been admitting more than 1,000 migrants daily through an appointment system powered by a U.S. government phone app known as CBP One.
After spiking to a record 250,000 in December 2023, illegal crossings at the southern border dropped earlier this year, mainly due to aggressive efforts by Mexico to interdict U.S.-bound migrants. They plunged even further after President Biden invoked sweeping presidential powers to sharply limit asylum in early June, falling precipitously that month and at the beginning of July. Since then, migrant crossings have plateaued.
While unlawful crossings remain low, some U.S. officials are concerned the presidential election could disturb the fragile equilibrium achieved at the southern border in recent months. Three U.S. officials said there could be a spike in illegal crossings if former President Donald Trump wins the election, as migrants try to enter the U.S. before he takes office in January.
“I could definitely see an increase, either a surge before the inauguration or a sustained increase after the election,” one of the U.S. officials said, requesting anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the press.
While Vice President Kamala Harris has vowed to keep and strengthen Mr. Biden’s asylum restrictions, Trump has promised to seal the southern border altogether, including by discontinuing the CBP One app and other programs that allow migrants to enter the U.S. legally. He also pledged to reinstate his hardline immigration policies, like the Remain-in-Mexico program, and launch the largest deportation operation in American history.
A CBP official said the agency “remains vigilant to constantly shifting migration patterns — including the operations of transnational criminal organizations and other bad actors that facilitate human smuggling — and adjusts operations accordingly.”
During its first three years in office, the Biden administration struggled with an unprecedented migration crisis at the southern border, fueled in part by record arrivals of migrants from crisis-stricken countries like Venezuela, where the U.S. cannot send deportees. It created scenes of chaos and coincided with mounting concerns among the public about border security.
It also ushered a dramatic policy pivot by the Biden administration, which came into office promising to “rebuild” the U.S. asylum system. But the asylum crackdown Mr. Biden enacted in June relies on the same authority the Trump administration used to limit legal and illegal immigration, and disqualifies most migrants from U.S. protection. Those who use the CBP One app are exempted.
Adam Isacson, a migration policy analyst at the Washington Office on Latin America, a research and advocacy group, said he expects migration flows to remain relatively the same if Harris wins, as she has pledged to largely continue Biden’s policies. But he predicted a “big jump” in border crossings if Trump is elected, especially by those waiting in Mexico for a CBP One appointment.
“The message, both from smugglers and the messages from migrants to each other, will be ‘get there now. There’s a hard deadline,'” Isacson said, referring to Inauguration Day on Jan. 20, 2025.
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From the archives: British PM Margaret Thatcher joins Face the Nation
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Maui surfer loses part of leg in shark attack, officials say
A shark bit a Maui surfer Friday morning and severed his leg, authorities said.
The man, 61, was surfing off Waiehu Beach Park Friday morning in a surf spot known as Sand Piles when a shark bit him,” Maui County said in a news release.
Police officers who arrived to the scene first tried to control the bleeding with tourniquets. His leg was “completely severed just below the knee,” officials said.
Witnesses told CBS affiliate Hawaii News Now that other surfers helped the man swim back to shore.
“I heard this yell and I looked, and all of a sudden I just seen him splash, and I don’t know what was happening,” witness David Basques told Hawaii News Now. “…He swam himself back maybe more than half the way, and then I seen somebody jump in and they went bring him inside.”
The man was alert while being treated on shore and then taken to Maui Memorial Medical Center in critical condition.
“I would like to commend the patient for his strength and wherewithal, getting himself to shore,” Maui Fire Department Assistant Chief Jeff Giesea told reporters, according to KGMB. “I mean, that’s extraordinary. Whatever Good Samaritans offered assistance, I’d like to commend them as well.”
The incident prompted officials to close the beach park. Officials warned people to stay out of the water in the area. The public warning to stay out of the water for a mile in each direction of the incident will be in effect until at least noon Saturday. The warning will be extended if there is a shark sighting in the area.
Maui fire and ocean safety officials were patrolling the waters using rescue watercraft and a drone. State officials provided shark warning signs and helped with cordoning off the area.
There were no details provided on what kind of shark was involved.
In June, well-known surfer Tamayo Perry was killed in a shark attack while surfing off Oahu’s North Shore.