'It seems that [U.S. Border Patrol is] letting [migrants] in and we're doing our part in order to keep them out,' DPS Highway Patrol Sgt. Rene Cordova explains (above, National Guardsmen patrol in Eagle Pass, Tx)
EXCLUSIVE: How the migrant crisis is sparking an American civil war: TODD BENSMAN's dispatch from a militarized Texas farm - where Biden's federal agents are sabotaging the state's desperate border enforcement
- U.S. Border Patrol leased a private pecan farm, at taxpayer expense, to help them process illegal immigrants entering America through Eagle Pass, Texas
- An enraged Texas Gov. Greg Abbott responded by dispatching officers to barricade the farm's gate and destroy a ramp leading migrants up from the river
- The conflict pits two American forces against each other and it's a glimpse into a truly dysfunctional border crisis
Few places along our 2,000-mile southern border with Mexico more perfectly illustrate America's utterly dysfunctional immigration policy than a remote, private pecan farm in Eagle Pass, Texas.
At this sprawling ranch - owned by Hugo and Magaly Urbina – on the banks of the Rio Grande, President Joe Biden's federal Border Patrol agents are locked in a bizarre daily struggle with Texas Governor Greg Abbott's Department of Public Safety (DPS).
Under a simple white tent on the farm, U.S. Border Patrol agents are processing illegal migrants and then transporting them by bus to a nearby brick-and-mortar facility.
From there they will likely be released into the U.S. interior to await judicial hearings on their asylum claims. For some, the process may take up to six years.
Just outside the property's fence, however - between the river and the farm - Texas DPS authorities stand guard and bristle with frustration.
Why?
'It seems that [U.S. Border Patrol is] letting [migrants] in and we're doing our part in order to keep them out,' DPS Highway Patrol Sgt. Rene Cordova explains to me.
Sgt. Cordova shows me fortifications they've built to stop migrants from crossing onto the Urbinas' farm, but Border Patrol tore down a section of the chain link fence.
It also wasn't helpful to Texas that the Urbinas – who leased a long stretch of their riverfront to the Border Patrol at expense to the U.S. taxpayer - dug a walkway ramp down to the river to make the steep bank more accessible.
This is nothing short of a civil war of sorts pitting two American forces, one controlled by Texas and the other by Washington D.C., against each other.
This is nothing short of a civil war of sorts pitting two American forces, one controlled by Texas and the other by Washington D.C., against each other
At this sprawling ranch - owned by Hugo and Magaly Urbina (above) – on the banks of the Rio Grande, President Joe Biden's federal Border Patrol agents are locked in a daily struggle with Texas Governor Greg Abbott's Department of Public Safety (DPS)
Governor Abbott's response to the pecan farm facility has been swift and aggressive.
He sent state troopers to occupy the Urbinas' land on the grounds that criminal activity was taking place.
Texas then bulldozed the river ramp, strung rows of barbed wire across it and planted a large sign that threatens a fine and reads: 'You cannot pass here'.
When the state discovered that the Urbinas had opened gates on their property, DPS chained them shut and piled dirt high on both sides of the opening.
Now, long, straggling lines of aspiring illegal immigrants trudge up and down the river under the withering southern summer sun, laterally traversing thousands of yards of razor wire strung along the international boundary.
Down at the river, dozens of others blocked by Texas DPS officers cool themselves in the shallow waters. Still more swim back to Piedras Negras on the Mexican side of the border.
They're all biding their time - looking for a gap in the Texas defenses or a friendly U.S. Border Patrol agent to give them a hand.
Privately, because they're not authorized to speak, some Border Patrol agents tell me they abhor having to escort illegal aliens into the country. But they're following orders.
One young, dripping wet Venezuelan man confirmed it all to me.
'They [Texas Department of Public Safety officers] won't let us pass,' he says.
So, his group will walk several hundred yards upriver to a spot where they heard the green uniformed 'American immigration' officers might be found.
'Over there, Border Patrol will take you.' he says, squishing away in soggy sneakers.
The Urbina farm offers a small glimpse of a much larger game playing out up and down the Rio Grande - a consequence of contradictory state and federal policies.
Under a simple white tent (above) on the farm, U.S. Border Patrol agents are processing illegal migrants and then transporting them by bus to a nearby brick-and-mortar facility
When the state discovered that the Urbinas had opened gates on their property, DPS chained them shut and piled dirt high on both sides of the opening
Down at the river, dozens of others blocked by Texas DPS officers cool themselves in the shallow waters. Still more swim back to Piedras Negras on the Mexican side of the border
With $10 billion in new state appropriations, Abbott's state police and national guard have turned this part of the borderlands into a garrison, complete with makeshift walls of cargo containers, steel fencing, and the ubiquitous wire.
The activity is so intense that it has reshaped the river itself.
State police and military forces occupy gravel river islands where migrants often hide. On one they've thinned out the vegetation and planted a Texas state flag. Any adult immigrant men and women caught crossing onto Texas land faces jail and misdemeanor trespass charges.
Another particularly problematic 44-acre island was essentially erased by Abbott's men, who filled a thin fork of the river with soil and sand. The new peninsula was cleared of brush and ringed with barbed wire.
The state has similarly denuded thousands of yards of riverbank downriver from Eagle Pass, bulldozing access roads and stationing camouflaged state National Guard personnel and DPS officers along it.
Texas boats, helicopters, military equipment, drones, and police invited from other states like Florida, give the scene the feel of a multi-layered military bulwark.
And most recently, the governor ordered a thousand feet of marine barrier, featuring large spinning buoys and a submerged net hanging below, to be installed in the river to prevent swimmers crossing the Rio Grande. It'll apparently be extended over time.
Another particularly problematic 44-acre island was essentially erased (shown above) by Abbott's men who filled a thin fork of the river with soil and sand. The new peninsula was cleared of brush and ringed with barbed wire [I like this picture because it shows the clever way Texas dealt with the little island formed by the river, typical of little islands formed by the river around here.]
State police and military forces occupy gravel river islands where migrants often hide. On one they've thinned out the vegetation and planted a Texas state flag
With $10 billion in new state appropriations, Abbott's state police and national guard have turned this part of the borderlands into a garrison, complete with makeshift walls of cargo containers, steel fencing, and the ubiquitous wire
Most recently, the governor ordered a thousand feet of marine barrier, featuring large spinning buoys (shown above) and a submerged net hanging below, to be installed in the river to prevent swimmers crossing the Rio Grande
But no matter what obstacle – physical and otherwise – Texas erects, the Border Patrol attempts to undermine them.
In one instance, more than 100 Venezuelans, Cubans and Colombians hiked thousands of yards to a point beyond the barbed wire and patrols, where Border Patrol vehicles were waiting. The immigrants crossed the river, and, as I watched, they were escorted into transport vans.
Texas state troopers on ATVs and in highway patrol vehicles can only observe. By the time the immigrants are beyond the state's wire, especially if they are in Border Patrol's custody, the officers are powerless to do much of anything.
Below immigrants roam the riverbed. They're looking for an opening or a helpful agent.
Texas workers moving a series of four-feet-wide giant buoys into place in Eagle Pass. The buoys were positioned in the Rio Grande, with netting underneath
A massive mob of hundreds of migrants crossing the Rio Grande in Eagle Pass, Texas
The string of migrants stretched all the way across the Rio Grande
The Texas Governor signed an executive order directing the Texas National Guard and Texas Department of Public Safety to arrest migrants and return them to the border
The Biden administration has failed to secure the southwestern border, as a record surge in asylum seekers has overwhelmed the government's immigration infrastructure
State and local governments on the border, as well as humanitarian groups there, have been calling on the White House to mount a stronger federal response, warning that their own resources have been stretched beyond the breaking point
The administration has dragged its feet on securing the border
Customs and Border Patrol saw 239,416 migrant encounters in May, the highest ever recorded in history
Texas is installing a 1,000-foot inflatable barrier in the Rio Grande River to stop migrants crossing near Eagle Pass, Texas
Migrants gather at a crossing into El Paso, Texas, as seen from Ciudad Juarez, Mexico
Female US Army soldier under DC orders opened up an Eagle Pass gate to let migrants in
Crowding in processing centers reveals the breakdown of the USA system
migrants have documents with court dates for their cases that won't take place until years into the future
Night vision imaging shows thousands of migrants swarming the southern border in Eagle Pass, Texas
Just 50 migrants were too much for the ultra-rich hypocritical residents of the 87 square mile island of Martha's Vineyard
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