
Illegal
entries into Arizona plummet, 60% fewer gotaways than in Biden years
By
Bethany Blankley | The Center Square contributor justthenews.com
Stats
represent roughly a 92% drop from illegal entries and a record number of
gotaways reported in Arizona during Biden era.
In
President Donald Trump’s first year in office, illegal border crossings in
Arizona plummeted to record lows.
They
represent roughly a 92% drop from illegal entries and a record number of
gotaways reported in Arizona during the Biden administration.
Under
the Trump administration, illegal entries in Arizona this year were 66% less
than the total number of gotaways that Border Patrol agents reported in Arizona
during the Biden years, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection data
and gotaway data exclusively obtained by The Center Square.
In
fiscal 2025, 65,813 illegal border crossers were apprehended in Arizona,
excluding gotaways, according to CBP data. The fiscal year goes from Oct. 1
through Sept. 30.
By
comparison, more than 775,000 illegal border crossers were reported in fiscal
2023, including nearly 577,000 reported by CBP and nearly 200,000 gotaways that
Border Patrol agents reported and exclusively
obtained by The Center Square at the time.
Fiscal
2025 apprehensions represent a fraction of those apprehended in previous years,
including 564,215 in fiscal 2024, 576,901 in fiscal 2023 and 571,720 in fiscal
2022, according to CBP data.
These
totals exclude gotaways, the official CBP term for those who illegally enter
between ports of entry to evade capture, don’t file immigration claims and
don’t return to Mexico. CBP doesn’t publicly report this data. The Center
Square obtained gotaway data from Border Patrol agents, reporting it each
month. At least two million gotaways were reported during the Biden
administration nationwide, The Center Square exclusively reported.
Many
gotaways are known to have criminal records. Some are on the terrorist
watchlist and many have previously been deported, law enforcement officers told
The Center Square.
Arizona
and Texas CBP sectors were among the hardest hit during the Biden
administration, each reporting unprecedented numbers.
Arizona’s
378 miles of shared border with Mexico are divided into two CBP sectors: Tucson
and Yuma. Tucson Sector’s 262-border miles extend from the Yuma County line to
the Arizona-New Mexico state line. Yuma Sector’s nearly 182,000 square miles of
primarily desert terrain extends from Imperial Sand Dunes in California to the
Yuma-Pima County line.
For
the majority of 2022 and 2023, three of Yuma Sector’s interior checkpoints were
down, Deputy Chief Border Patrol Agent Dustin Caudle told Congress, expressing
concerns about gotaways, The Center Square reported.
The checkpoints are critical for interdicting gotaways but because agents were
pulled from the field to process illegal border crossers into the U.S., the
checkpoints were closed, leaving the border wide open and unmanned, he said.
In
2023, the Tucson Sector reported the third-highest number of illegal entries
along the southwest border, behind the top two sectors of El Paso and Del Rio
in Texas. Border Patrol agents apprehended 373,625 people and reported at least
185,866 gotaways – nearly half as many as who were apprehended, or 49%, The
Center Square reported.
Tucson
Sector Border Patrol Chief John Modlin testified before Congress that the
majority of gotaways were single military age men working for transnational
criminal human and drug smuggling organizations, The Center Square reported.
Modlin
described the tactics they used to pull agents from patrolling the border and
interdicting illegal crossers, called “task saturation.” It refers to when
“smuggling organizations split large groups of migrants into many smaller
groups [and direct them] to illegally cross the border all at once at different
locations, effectively saturating the area with migrants and exhausting our
response capability.” This overwhelms Border Patrol agents’ response, enabling
illicit contraband and criminal gotaways to move through another area of the
border without getting caught, he explained.
By
2024, the situation in the Tucson Sector reported more apprehensions than other
southwest border sectors, The Center Square reported.
That
changed this year after Trump implemented a series of border security policies
that resulted in record low illegal crossings at the southwest border, The
Center Square reported.
Under
Trump’s direction, Arizona Border Patrol agents are now in the field, assisted
by the National Guard and Coast Guard members. They’re no longer releasing
illegal border crossers into the interior but processing them for expedited
removal. The Department of Homeland Security is expanding
smart wall construction and the Department of War is expanding
border barrier infrastructure in Arizona. DOW, DHS, CBP and Border Patrol
recruitment also reached record highs this year, including in Arizona, The
Center Square reported.