First off 'lady smart mouth', you point to Mexican immigrations, I was not saying Mexican immigrations at all. Not one word about Mexican and as our news has shown us it is from many nations. There have been films of folks riding on trains and coming by buses and then being allowed to cross into the US. I have no idea where you get your smarts but they are definitely very biased and wrong.
Read this article and as far as I know this is still happening. And this is not FOX NEWS either. When will you ever grow up?
Have a good day.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/06/17/children-surge-immigration-texas/10643609/
Immigrant children continue to surge into South Texas
Rick Jervis, USA TODAY 5:27 p.m. EDT June 17, 2014
MISSION, Texas – A group of around 250 immigrants, mostly children, trotted across the U.S. border near the Anzalduas International Bridge here earlier this month and climbed atop a river levee.
Then, instead of sneaking around Border Patrol checkpoints or cramming into vans for safe houses farther north, the group did something peculiar for those crossing illegally into the USA: They squatted on the levee and awaited their arrest.
The group was part of the recent surge of unaccompanied minors who are streaming into this hot, flat stretch of South Texas, overwhelming Border Patrol facilities and sparking heated debate in Washington over what's causing the crisis and how to handle it.
One key difference the recent arrivals are displaying from their predecessors: They're not bothering to sneak deeper into Texas, opting instead to turn themselves in and allow U.S. policy toward immigrant youth decide their fate, said Chris Cabrera, a McAllen-based Border Patrol agent and vice president of the local chapter of the National Border Patrol Council.
"We're seeing record numbers of children coming across," he said. "We're dealing with so many of them turning themselves in that it makes it hard for our agents to focus on anything else."
The number of immigrant children served by the Office of Refugee Resettlement, which is responsible for the youth, has soared from around 7,000 to 8,000 a year earlier this decade to 13,625 in fiscal year 2012 and 24,668 last fiscal year, according to the office. So far this year, the agency has counted more than 42,000.
The children are crossing over from Mexico but are predominantly from Central American countries, such as Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala. On Friday, Vice President Joe Biden is expected to meet with Guatemalan President Otto Perez Molina, along with Salvadoran and Honduran officials, in Guatemala to discuss the crisis.
Administration officials have said violence and economic hardship in those countries are prompting the children to seek a better life in the USA. Some lawmakers, however, argue the youths – and the smuggling rings bringing them in – are exploiting U.S. policy, which allows youngsters from Central American countries other than Mexico to be released to an adult living in the USA while awaiting their court hearing. Mexican youth are returned to an agency in that country.
Meanwhile, they continue to arrive, filling up facilities faster than officials can open them. In South Texas, where the bulk of the surge is coming through, more than 1,600 youths have filled up 13 shelters, said Kimi Jackson, of the South Texas Pro Bono Asylum Representation Project, one of the few agencies that has met with the detained children. Federal officials have also opened temporary facilities at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio, in Ventura, Calif., and in Fort Sill, Okla., to deal with the overflow.