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Friday, November 22, 2024

Texas National Guard Will Start Helping Make Border Arrests

'To respond to this disaster and secure the rule of law at our Southern border, more manpower is needed...'

(Headline USA) A Texas National Guard deployment along the U.S.-Mexico border will start helping troopers make arrests, Republican Gov. Greg Abbott said Tuesday, as the state begins filling a formerly empty prison with illegals accused of trespassing.

Abbott said the Guard would “assist” troopers with arresting illegal immigrants on state charges but offered no details — making the extent of the new role unclear.

The National Guard has kept a presence on the nation’s southern border for years but has largely been assigned to observational posts.

The announcement comes as Texas this month began jailing illegals caught entering private land, part of a broader campaign by Abbott to toughen border enforcement as the number of crossings remain high.

“To respond to this disaster and secure the rule of law at our Southern border, more manpower is needed,” Abbott wrote in a letter to Maj. Gen. Tracy R. Norris, adjutant general of the Texas National Guard.

Spokespersons for Abbott and the Texas National Guard did not return messages.

Critics have previously voiced concerns of governors using Guard members to take an active role in law enforcement.

Other GOP governors have deployed National Guard members to the border in recent months, including South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem.

Kate Huddleston, an attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union, called Abbott’s latest orders “unusual and extremely troubling.”

“We are concerned for asylum seekers and other migrants who are coming to the United States, and also we are concerned for border residents who have borne the brunt of this law enforcement saturation on the border in the past and are doing so again,” Huddleston said.

In addition to it being unclear how Texas National Guard members would help with arrests, Abbott did not say how many members on the current deployment would be part of those efforts.

The arrests so far by Texas state troopers have taken place in Val Verde County, where local officials say they were told that only individuals traveling alone would be arrested, and not family units.

The detainees are being held at what had been an empty state prison in Dilley, Texas, about 100 miles north of the border city of Laredo.

County Judge Lewis Owens, the top elected official in the county of nearly 50,000 residents, said crimes including home break-ins, theft and property damage are on the rise in the recent months as the number of crossings has remained high.

Adapted from reporting by Associated Press.

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