Federal prosecutors will not seek the death penalty in their case against the gunman in the 2019 mass shooting at a Walmart in El Paso, Texas.
Author: Lauren Villagran, El Paso Times
Title 42 ending: DHS chief says White House exploring ‘host’ of solutions to prevent border crisis
Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas visited El Paso and said the Biden administration is working with Mexico as Title 42 is set to end
Asylum seekers, migrants cross en masse at Texas-Mexico border as Title 42 nears end
Hundreds of migrants huddled Sunday in hopes of seeking asylum in the U.S. It was one of the largest mass crossings this border has seen in decades.
Last bus out: How one family’s trip on a migrant bus delivered a dream
With a camera in hand, a Venezuelan family documents the 2,200-mile journey from an El Paso migrant welcome center to an uncertain life in New York City.
Daylight saving time causes confusion, issues at the southern border as Texas, parts of Mexico now out of sync
Texas’ El Paso and Mexico’s Juárez have kept their clocks the same for decades. But now daylight saving time has the two an hour apart.
Texas governor, Mexican states strike deals to end truck inspections that clogged border
Agreements end protests and most of the truck inspections that held up trade at Texas-Mexico border.
Happy holidays? El Paso-Juárez cross-border traffic is ‘edging up slowly’ ahead of Black Friday.
While cross-border traffic is “edging up slowly,” Mexican shoppers could be limited by a weak peso, COVID-19 vaccine restrictions and inflation.
‘I am so happy’: US land border reopens to vaccinated Mexican tourists
On Nov. 8, U.S. ports of entry reopened to tourists. Here’s what it looked like at the border as the ban on non-essential travel was lifted.
‘Vaccine diplomacy’: Should the US share vaccines with Mexico? Biden says not yet
Disparities in COVID-19 vaccine rollout between the U.S. and Mexico create some friction at border.
Asylum seekers at US-Mexico border see hope in Biden administration immigration changes
Asylum seekers turned back to Mexico under the ‘Remain in Mexico’ program hope for opportunities in the U.S. Some fear new humanitarian crisis.