Border Patrol agents are part of the community in Laredo. But the upcoming murder trial involving an agent could threaten the agency’s image there.
Author: Rick Jervis, USA TODAY
How was David DePape, suspect in Paul Pelosi attack, able to live in the U.S. without a visa?
Around half of undocumented migrants in U.S. overstayed visas, like Paul Pelosi’s alleged attacker. The U.S. lacks resources to go after them all.
‘No one wants to struggle’: Immigrants heartbroken after court rules DACA unconstitutional
A federal appeals court headed by Judge Andrew Hanen has ruled DACA illegal. There are currently more than 600,000 people in the Obama-era program
Migrants are helping to rebuild Florida after Hurricane Ian. They might not get paid for it.
Migrants are on the frontlines of disaster recovery but many are vulnerable to abuse. Some employers refuse to pay them.
Texas, Arizona bus migrants to U.S. cities, and now Chicago. Here’s what could happen next
Thousands of migrants are being bused from the border to New York, Washington and now Chicago. Advocates say the plans could backfire on the states that started them
‘Like a roller coaster’: DACA opens doors for two Texas brothers, leaves another in shadows
In Texas, two brothers enjoy DACA benefits. But the youngest sibling in their mixed-status family has struggled, unable to obtain protection.
DACA abre puertas a 2 hermanos de Texas, deja a otro viviendo en las sombras
En Texas, dos hermanos disfrutan de los beneficios de DACA. Pero el hermano menor de esta familia de estatus mixto, no ha podido obtener protección.
Migrants, people of color vulnerable to white extremists groups along US-Mexico border
Fueled by conspiracy theories, white extremists are targeting migrants and other groups, according to Homeland Security and local watchdog groups.
‘Texas is a battleground’: Latino voters torn between GOP and Democrats ahead of midterm elections
Latino voters will decide who wins a competitive congressional seat in South Texas. The contest shows how the GOP could win over more Hispanics.
Migrant encounters fall in January at US-Mexico border, first month-to-month decline since September
Fewer migrants arrived at the U.S.-Mexico border in January, marking the first month-to-month decline since September.