Washington — The number of migrants crossing the U.S. southern border illegally in President Trump's first full month in office plunged to a level not seen in at least 25 years, according to preliminary government data obtained by CBS News. Last month, Border Patrol recorded about 8,450 apprehensions of migrants who crossed into the country unlawfully between official entry points along the U.S.-Mexico border, the statistics show.
Main Idea: Illegal crossings at the U.S. southern border fell to a decades-low level in February, as President Donald Trump’s crackdown sharply reduced Border Patrol apprehensions.
Key Points:
Faster deportations and less asylum screening may cut legal protections, raise family separation risks, and increase fear in immigrant communities.
Fewer illegal crossings could ease border pressure, reduce some local strain, and give households and taxpayers a sense of more control.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Core enforcement agency whose apprehension data and actions are central to the story.
Central actor; the article focuses on his border crackdown and its effect on illegal crossings.
Central enforcement agency mentioned as carrying out arrests, deportations, and detention.
The article centers on U.S. border enforcement and immigration policy.
Federal immigration authority implicated in the enforcement and detention context.
Former president referenced for prior asylum restrictions and migration trends.
The military is described as being used for immigration enforcement, though the article is not primarily about it.
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Sign in to commentA specific public-health expulsion authority discussed as a possible further restriction, but not an actor.
Mentioned as the main enforcement theater, but it is a location/zone rather than a distinct actor.