San Diego.
The man and two women tried to use dense fog to
cover their attempt to climb a section of 30-foot-high fence — part of
nearly 100 miles of replacement wall built under Mr. Trump.
They cleared the primary fence up along the
border but became stuck atop the fog-slicked secondary fence, which is
set back from the boundary line, creating an enforcement corridor
between the two fences.
It’s not clear how they managed to scale the two walls, though
Customs and Border Protection suggested they likely had smugglers who
were helping them but then abandoned them when they got stuck.
Agents called out the San Diego Fire Department, which had to use a truck and lengthy extension ladder to get the migrants down.
All three were determined to be in the country without permission.
“These three were very fortunate to not have
fallen from the top of the wall, which could have resulted in serious
injury or death,” said Aaron Heitke, acting chief patrol agent in the San Diego sector. “These dangers are not important considerations to smugglers, who place an emphasis on profits over safety.”
Falls from the wall do happen, said Supervisory
Agent Jeffrey R. Stephenson, who said agents then rush them to medical
attention.
“The falls have led to numerous serious
injuries including broken legs, broken ankles, skull fractures, brain
bleeds, broken scapula, fractured vertebrae and appendicitis,” he said.
The wall is the most visible of Mr. Trump’s
get-tough efforts on illegal immigration, though its effectiveness in
stemming last year’s surge in the flow of immigrants is heatedly
debated.
Most analysts say the wall is more effective on
drug-trafficking and on migrants from Mexico, who generally didn’t
attempt to exploit the loopholes used by Central Americans during the
surge.
The new fence design is up to 30 feet of bollard-style barrier. In San Diego, it replaced what was known as landing mat fencing, an outdated design that used thin metal plates that were easily breached.
The new design is supposed to be more resistant to cutting and climbing.
The Washington Post reported late last year that smugglers were still managing to cut holes.
But Brandon Judd, president of the National Border Patrol Council, said he hasn’t seen that.
“Old sections, yes, there are a great many
breaches and had the administration continued to build sections of wall
like what was built under the Bush administration, those wall were
breachable,” Mr. Judd told The Washington Times on C-SPAN’s “Newsmakers”
program in late December.
“But there has been a lot of research and
development that has gone into the new walls that are currently being
built,” he said. “That research and development shows that they are
much, much more difficult to breach, and again, we just haven’t seen any
breaches.”
The Border Patrol had to ride to the rescue of
three migrants Sunday after they got stuck on top of President Trump’s
border wall in
No comments:
Post a Comment