Border officials say the attack bolsters President Donald Trump’s claims that the U.S.-Mexico border is more lawless than official statistics indicate.
In the first 48 hours of his second administration, President Trump’s string of executive orders on the border crisis began to turn the tide on illegal immigration.
Hannity described his and Trump's "friendship" as the president responded to soft questioning with claims about January 6, immigration, and the size of the 2024 presidential election victory. Despite ...
El Paso experts weigh in on Trump's administration's decision to do away with an immigration app that allowed asylum seekers ...
Hours after the Pentagon announced that it would send 1,500 active duty troops to the U.S.-Mexico, reports surfaced that the number was actually 10,000.
A narcotics detection dog sniffed out the drugs after officers detected "irregularities in the vehicle’s gas tank," according to U.S. CBP.
The U.S. southern border has seen a sharp drop in migrant encounters entering between ports of entry at the southern border, according to a CBP source.
"We're just taking in women and small children that were left stranded in Tijuana, but little by little more and more are knocking." ...
The program that resulted—"Mexico Embraces You"—aims to shelter deported Mexicans, some 5 million of whom are estimated to be living in the United States illegally and thus at risk of being sent back.
Illegal crossings at the southern border were lower in December 2024 than in December 2020, Border Patrol data showed.
On his first day in office, Trump signed at least seven executive orders impacting immigration across the country. How will they affect Indiana?