Razor wire and buoys: Texas escalates tactics along US-Mexico border
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| Eagle Pass, Texas
Wrecking ball-sized buoys on the Rio Grande. Razor wire strung across private property without permission. Bulldozers changing the very terrain of America鈥檚 southern border.
For more than two years, Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott has escalated measures to keep migrants from entering the United States, pushing legal boundaries with a go-it-alone bravado along the state鈥檚 1,200-mile border with Mexico. Now blowback over the tactics is widening, including from within Texas.
A state trooper鈥檚 account of officers denying migrants water in 100-degree Fahrenheit temperatures and razor wire leaving asylum-seekers bloodied has prompted renewed criticism. The Mexican government, the Biden administration, and some residents are pushing back.
Mr. Abbott, who cruised to a third term in November while promising tougher border crackdowns, has used disaster declarations as the legal bedrock for some measures.
Critics call that a warped view.
鈥淭here are so many ways that what Texas is doing right now is just flagrantly illegal,鈥 said David Donatti, an attorney for the Texas American Civil Liberties Union.
Mr. Abbott did not respond to requests for comment. He has repeatedly attacked President Joe Biden鈥檚 border policies, tweeting Friday that they 鈥渆ncourage migrants to risk their lives crossing illegally through the Rio Grande, instead of safely and legally over a bridge.鈥
The Biden administration said illegal border crossings have declined significantly since new immigration rules took effect in May.
Altered border
Under the international bridge connecting Eagle Pass, Texas, with Piedras Negras, Mexico, protesters gathered at Shelby Park this month, chanting 鈥渟ave the river鈥 and blowing a conch shell in a ceremony. A few yards away, crews unloaded neon-orange buoys from trailers parked by a boat ramp off the Rio Grande.
Jessie Fuentes stood with the environmental advocates, watching as state troopers restricted access to the water where he holds an annual kayak race. Shipping containers and layers of concertina wire lined the riverbank.
The experienced kayaker often took clients and race participants into the water through a shallow channel formed by a border island covered in verdant brush. That has been replaced by a bulldozed stretch of barren land connected to the mainland and fortified with razor wire.
鈥淭he river is a federally protected river by so many federal agencies, and I just don鈥檛 know how it happened,鈥 Mr. Fuentes told the Eagle Pass City Council the night before.
Neither did the city council.
鈥淚 feel like the state government has kind of bypassed local government in a lot of different ways. And so I felt powerless at times,鈥 council member Elias Diaz told The Associated Press.
The International Boundary of Water Commission says it was not notified when Texas modified several islands or deployed the massive buoys to create a barrier covering 1,000 feet of the middle of the Rio Grande, with anchors in the riverbed.
The Justice Department has warned Texas that the buoy wall is unlawful and the Biden administration will sue if the state doesn鈥檛 remove the wall. Mr. Abbott tweeted Friday that the state 鈥渉as the sovereign authority to defend our border.鈥
The floating barrier also provoked tension with Mexico, which says it violates treaties. Mexico鈥檚 secretary of foreign relations asked the U.S. government to remove the buoys and razor wire in a June letter.
Mr. Fuentes sued over the buoys, arguing that border crossings are not covered by the Texas Disaster Act.
As for the river islands, the Texas General Land Office gave the state Department of Public Safety access starting in April 鈥渢o curb the ongoing border crisis.鈥
鈥淎dditionally, the General Land Office will also permit vegetation management, provided compliance with all applicable state and federal regulations is upheld,鈥 said a letter from the office鈥檚 commissioner, Dawn Buckingham.
The Texas Military Department cleared out carrizo cane, which Buckingham鈥檚 office called an 鈥渋nvasive plant鈥 in its response to questions from the AP, and changed the landscape, affecting the river鈥檚 flow.
Environmental experts are concerned.
鈥淎s far as I know, if there鈥檚 flooding in the river, it鈥檚 much more severe in Piedras Negras than it is in Eagle Pass because that鈥檚 the lower side of the river. And so next time the river really gets up, it鈥檚 going to push a lot of water over on the Mexican side, it looks like to me,鈥 said Tom Vaughan, a retired professor and co-founder of the Rio Grande International Study Center.
Mr. Fuentes recently sought special permission from the city and DPS to navigate through his familiar kayaking route.
鈥淪ince they rerouted the water on the island, the water is flowing differently,鈥 Mr. Fuentes said. 鈥淚 can feel it.鈥
The state declined to release any records that might detail the environmental impacts of the buoys or changes to the landscape.
Victor Escalon, a DPS regional director overseeing Del Rio down to Brownsville, pointed to the governor鈥檚 emergency disaster declaration. 鈥淲e do everything we can to prevent crime, period. And that鈥檚 the job,鈥 he added.
Trespassing to stop trespassers
For one property owner, the DPS mission cut him out of his land.
In 2021, as Eagle Pass became the preferred route by migrants crossing into the United States, Magali and Hugo Urbina bought a pecan orchard by the river that they called Heavenly Farms.
Hugo Urbina worked with DPS when the agency built a fence on his property and arrested migrants for trespassing. But the relationship turned acrimonious a year later after DPS asked to put up concertina wire on riverfront property that the Urbinas were leasing to the U.S. Border Patrol to process immigrants.
Mr. Urbina wanted DPS to sign a lease releasing him from liability if the wire caused injuries. DPS declined but still installed concertina wire, moved vehicles onto the property, and shut the Urbinas鈥 gates. That cut off the Border Patrol鈥檚 access to the river, though it still leases land from Mr. Urbina.
鈥淭hey do whatever it is that they want,鈥 Mr. Urbina said this month.
The farmer, a Republican, calls it 鈥減oison politics.鈥 Critics call it d茅j脿 vu.
鈥淚 also really see a very strong correlation to the Trump and post-Trump era in which most of the Trump administration鈥檚 immigration policy was aggressive and extreme and very violative of people鈥檚 rights, and very focused on making the political point,鈥 said Aron Thorn, an attorney with the Texas Civil Rights Project.
鈥淭he design of this is the optics and the amount of things that they sacrifice for those optics now is quite extraordinary,鈥 Mr. Thorn said.
DPS works with 300 landowners, according to Escalon. He said it is unusual for the department to take over a property without the landowner鈥檚 consent, but the agency says the Disaster Act provides the authority.
Mr. Urbina said he supports the governor鈥檚 efforts, 鈥渂ut not in this way.鈥
鈥淵ou don鈥檛 go out there and start breaking the law and start making your citizens feel like they鈥檙e second-hand citizens,鈥 he added.
This story was reported by The Associated Press.