Border Security: The Role of the U.S. Border Patrol

This report discusses the United States Border Patrol's history as our nation's first line of defense against unauthorized migration. Today, the USBP's primary mission is to detect and prevent the entry of terrorists, weapons of mass destruction, and illegal aliens into the country, and to interdict drug smugglers and other criminals along the border. The Homeland Security Act of 2002 dissolved the Immigration and Naturalization Service and placed the USBP within the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).


Border Security: The Role of the
U.S. Border Patrol

Chad C. Haddal
Specialist in Immigration Policy
August 11, 2010
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
RL32562
CRS Report for Congress
P
repared for Members and Committees of Congress

Border Security: The Role of the U.S. Border Patrol

Summary
The United States Border Patrol (USBP) has a long and storied history as our nation’s first line of
defense against unauthorized migration. Today, the USBP’s primary mission is to detect and
prevent the entry of terrorists, weapons of mass destruction, and illegal aliens into the country,
and to interdict drug smugglers and other criminals along the border. The Homeland Security Act
of 2002 dissolved the Immigration and Naturalization Service and placed the USBP within the
Department of Homeland Security (DHS). Within DHS, the USBP forms a part of the Bureau of
Customs and Border Protection under the Directorate of Border and Transportation Security.
During the last decade, the USBP has seen its budget and manpower more than triple. This
expansion was the direct result of congressional concerns about illegal immigration and the
agency’s adoption of “Prevention Through Deterrence” as its chief operational strategy in 1994.
The strategy called for placing USBP resources and manpower directly at the areas of greatest
illegal immigration in order to detect, deter, and apprehend aliens attempting to cross the border
between official points of entry. Post 9/11, the USBP refocused its strategy on preventing the
entry of terrorists and weapons of mass destruction, as laid out in its recently released National
Strategy. In addition to a workforce of over 20,000 agents, the USBP deploys vehicles, aircraft,
watercraft, and many different technologies to defend the border.
In the course of discharging its duties, the USBP patrols 8,000 miles of American international
borders with Mexico and Canada and the coastal waters around Florida and Puerto Rico.
However, there are significant geographic, political, and immigration-related differences between
the northern border with Canada and the Southwest border with Mexico. Accordingly, the USBP
deploys a different mix of personnel and resources along the two borders. Due to the fact that
approximately 98.7% of unauthorized migrant apprehensions by the USBP occur along the
Southwest border, the USBP deploys over 85% of its agents there to deter illegal immigration.
The northern border is more than two times longer than the Southwest border, and features far
lower numbers of aliens attempting to enter illegally, but may be more vulnerable to terrorist
infiltration. As a consequence of this, the USBP has focused its northern border efforts on
deploying technology and cooperating closely with Canadian authorities through the creation of
International Border Enforcement Teams.
Some issues for Congress to consider could include the slow rate of integration between the
USBP’s biometric database of illegal aliens and the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s (FBI)
biometric database of criminals and terrorists; the number of unauthorized aliens who die
attempting to enter the country each year; the increasing attacks on Border Patrol agents, and the
threat posed by terrorists along the sparsely defended northern border as well as the more porous
Southwest border.
This report will be updated as circumstances warrant.

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Border Security: The Role of the U.S. Border Patrol

Contents
Recent Legislative Developments................................................................................................ 1
Administration Request for Border Security Funds................................................................ 1
Congressional Action on Border Security .............................................................................. 1
Background ................................................................................................................................ 2
Organization and Composition .................................................................................................... 4
Evolution of the National Strategic Plan ................................................................................ 4
National Border Patrol Strategy............................................................................................. 5
Budget and Resources ........................................................................................................... 6
Surveillance Assets (Secure Border Initiative) ....................................................................... 8
Automated Biometrics Identification System (IDENT)........................................................ 10
Apprehensions Statistics...................................................................................................... 12
Multiple Apprehensions ................................................................................................ 12
Successful Illegal Entries .............................................................................................. 12
Multiple Correlations .................................................................................................... 12
Southwest Border...................................................................................................................... 13
Prevention Through Deterrence In Action............................................................................ 13
Southern Border Manpower ................................................................................................ 13
Southwest Border Apprehensions ........................................................................................ 14
Border Safety Initiative ....................................................................................................... 19
Interior Repatriation Program.............................................................................................. 20
Northern Border........................................................................................................................ 20
U.S.-Canadian Cooperation................................................................................................. 20
Northern Border Manpower ................................................................................................ 21
Integrated Border Enforcement Teams (IBET)..................................................................... 23
Northern Border Apprehensions .......................................................................................... 23
Border Patrol Issues for Congress.............................................................................................. 24
9/11 Report and the Northern Border................................................................................... 24
Migrant Deaths ................................................................................................................... 25
Attacks on Border Patrol Agents ......................................................................................... 28
Interior Enforcement ........................................................................................................... 29
Integration of IDENT/IAFIS Law Enforcement Databases .................................................. 30
Deployment of SBInet Technology...................................................................................... 32
Coordination with Other Federal Agencies .......................................................................... 32
Civilian Humanitarian Groups............................................................................................. 33
Staffing and Training Issues ................................................................................................ 33
Agent Attrition.................................................................................................................... 34

Figures
Figure 1. Border Patrol Appropriations........................................................................................ 7
Figure 2. Southwest Border Agent Manpower ........................................................................... 14
Figure 3. Southwest Border Apprehensions ............................................................................... 15
Figure 4. Southwest Border Apprehensions, by Sector ............................................................... 17
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Figure 5. Percentage of Southern Border Apprehensions, by State ............................................. 18
Figure 6. Border Patrol Agents at the Northern Border............................................................... 22
Figure 7. Northern Border Apprehensions ................................................................................. 24
Figure 8. Migrant Deaths, Center for Immigration Research Data.............................................. 26
Figure 9. Migrant Deaths, Border Patrol Data............................................................................ 26
Figure 10. Migrant Mortality Rate, per 10,000 Apprehensions ................................................... 28
Figure 11. Attacks on Border Patrol Agents ............................................................................... 29
Figure 12. Overall Border Patrol Agent and Pilot Manpower ..................................................... 34
Figure 13. Border Patrol Agent Attrition Rate............................................................................ 36

Contacts
Author Contact Information ...................................................................................................... 36

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Recent Legislative Developments
Administration Request for Border Security Funds
In a June 22, 2010, budget amendment the Administration requested an additional $600 million
for border security along the Southwest border of the United States, including added funding to
the U.S. Border Patrol (USBP). This funding would be partially offset by rescinding $100 million
in Department of Homeland Security (DHS) funds for SBInet (commonly known as the “virtual
border fence”), which has been suspended pending the outcome of a technical and cost review.
The Administration requested that the remainder be designated as emergency requirements. Of
the total, $399 million would be for DHS and $201 million would go to the Department of Justice
(DOJ).
Within the DHS total, $297 million would be used to hire 1,000 new Border Patrol agents, $37
million for two new unmanned aerial detection systems, $53 million for 160 new Immigration
and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents, $6.5 million for 30 new Customs and Border Patrol
(CBP) officers, and $6 million for 20 new Customs and Border Protection (CBP) canine teams to
improve border enforcement operations along the Southwest border.
The $201 million that is being requested for DOJ would increase the presence of federal law
enforcement in the Southwest border districts by adding seven Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) Gunrunner Teams, five FBI Hybrid Task Forces, additional Drug
Enforcement Administration (DEA) agents, equipment, operational support, and additional
attorneys and immigration judges, and supporting additional detention and incarceration costs for
criminal aliens in coordination with DHS enforcement activities. The amendment would also
provide funding to support Mexican law enforcement operations with ballistic analysis, DNA
analysis, information sharing, technical capabilities, and technical assistance.1
Congressional Action on Border Security
The budget amendment by the Administration was initially included in the House-passed version
of H.R. 4899, but the border security provisions were dropped prior to final passage and the
identical provisions were re-introduced as a separate bill—the Emergency Border Security
Supplemental Appropriations Act of 2010 (H.R. 5875). H.R. 5875 includes $701 million for
border security, $100 million more than the Administration’s request. Both the Administration and
the House-amended version include $201 million to DOJ for border security efforts, largely for
more law enforcement personnel, as discussed above. H.R. 5875 was passed in the House on July
28, 2010.
For CBP, House-passed H.R. 5875 would provide a total of $412 million, $13 million more than
the request, including $208 million for new Border Patrol agents, $32 million for two new
unmanned aerial detection systems, $136 million to hire and retain new CBP officers, and $36

1 OMB, Estimate No. 8, “FY2010 Emergency Supplemental Proposals in the FY2011 Budget for the Departments of
Homeland Security and Justice to Support Efforts to Secure the Southwest Border and Enhance Federal Border
Protection and Law Enforcement and Counternarcotics Activities,” June 22, 2010, hereinafter, OMB, Border Security
Request, 6-22-10; http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/assets/budget_amendments/amendment_06_22_10.pdf.
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million for tactical communications and infrastructure, as well as for corruption investigations,
and $8 million for training. Additionally, the House-passed version provides $30 million for ICE,
$23 million less than requested, to reduce narcotics smuggling and border violence, and it puts
$50 million toward supporting state and local law enforcement through Operation Stonegarden
(distributed through FEMA). Also, the Administration’s request would provide fewer Border
Patrol agents and CBP officers than the House July-amended version.
On August 5, 2010, the Senate took up S. 3721 as a substitute amendment to House-passed H.R.
5875. The bill was passed by unanimous consent. Senate-passed H.R. 5875 includes $600 million
for border security ($101 million less than House-passed H.R. 5875 would provide), of which
$394 million is allocated to DHS and $196 million to DOJ. In contrast to the House version of the
bill, Senate-passed H.R. 5875 is reportedly completely offset by increases to H1-B and L visa fees
and a rescission.
For CBP, Senate-passed H.R. 5875 would provide a total of $306 million, including $176 million
for additional Border Patrol agents, $39 million for CBP officers at ports of entry on the
Southwest border, $10 million to support integrity and background investigation programs, $14
million for tactical communications, $32 million for UAV acquisition and deployment, and $6
million for the construction of forward-operating bases for the Border Patrol. Senate-passed H.R.
5875 also includes $80 million for ICE, of which $30 million is directed toward efforts to reduce
the threat of violence along the Southwest border, and $50 million for additional ICE personnel;
and $8 million for the CBP, BP, and ICE basic training at the Federal Law Enforcement Training
Center (FLETC).
On August 9, the House introduced a new border security supplemental bill—H.R. 6080—which
was subsequently passed by the House on August 10. H.R. 6080 contains identical language to
Senate-passed H.R. 5875. Reportedly, the House took up the bill with a new number to avoid a
dispute related to its constitutional obligation to originate all revenue measures.2 This dispute
arose with the addition of funding provisions in Senate-passed H.R. 5875 that were not included
in the House-passed version. As of August 11, H.R. 6080 was awaiting a Senate vote.
Background
Founded in 1924 by an appropriations act of Congress (Act of May 28, 1924; 43 Stat. 240), the
USBP has a long and storied history as our nation’s front line in the struggle to secure our
borders. The USBP’s mission has historically been to prevent unauthorized aliens from entering
into the country. As such, until recently the USBP formed part of the Immigration and
Naturalization Service (INS). The Homeland Security Act of 2002 (P.L. 107-296) merged most
interior and border enforcement functions of the Department of Agriculture, the INS, and the U.S.
Customs Service to form the Directorate of Border and Transportation Security (BTS) within
DHS. Using the authority given by Congress in the Homeland Security Act, the Administration
sub-divided BTS and placed the border enforcement functions, including the USBP, within the
Bureau of Customs and Border Protection (CBP). This consolidated all the agencies charged with
border enforcement duties with the overarching goal of enhancing security by allowing for the

2 Theo Emery and Edward Epstein, “Border Security Bill Passes in House,” CQ Today, August 10, 2010, online
edition.
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freer sharing of information and resources between all the organizations with a presence on the
border.3
Although CBP is charged with overall border enforcement, within the bureau a distinction is
made concerning border enforcement at and between points of entry. As currently comprised, the
USBP’s primary mission is to detect and prevent the entry of terrorists, weapons of mass
destruction, and unauthorized aliens into the country, and to interdict drug smugglers and other
criminals between official points of entry. USBP agents have no official role at points of entry;
instead, CBP inspectors stationed there are responsible for conducting immigrations, customs,
and agricultural inspections on entering aliens.
The USBP’s statutory authority for border enforcement powers derives from section 287 of the
Immigration and Nationality Act (INA).4 The INA gives immigration officers (as designated by
federal regulations) the statutory authority to search, interrogate, and arrest unauthorized aliens
and all others who are violating immigration laws. The INA also bequeaths immigration officers a
broader statutory authority to make arrests for any felony cognizable under the laws of the United
States. Federal regulations then designate USBP agents as immigration officers capable of
wielding the above mentioned powers.5 This means that the USBP is not a statutorily defined
agency, instead its role is delineated through federal regulations.
In the course of discharging its duties the USBP patrols 8,000 miles of our international borders
with Mexico and Canada and the coastal waters around Florida and Puerto Rico. The United
States’ northern and southwestern borders differ radically in geography, climate, and length. The
northern border with Canada touches 12 states and is over 4,000 miles long.6 Among its many
challenging natural features are vast mountain ranges such as the Rockies, the Great Lakes, many
different river systems, and in the winter heavy snow and bitter cold temperatures. Conversely,
the southwestern border with Mexico touches only four states and is less than half as long,
featuring large tracts of desert land where temperatures average well over 100 degrees for much
of the year, mountain ranges, and the Rio Grande along the Texas border. Patterns of illegal
immigration differ widely between the northern and Southwest borders. The southwestern border
accounts for over 97% of all illegal alien apprehensions and thereby commands the lion’s share of
USBP resources and manpower. Not surprisingly, the USBP’s main emphasis along the
southwestern border is containing unauthorized immigration. The northern border, conversely,
poses a severe logistical challenge given its length, geographic complexity, and comparative lack
of manpower. Along the northern border, the main concerns are the border’s vulnerability to
terrorist infiltration and the proliferation of cross-border smuggling.

3 For a more detailed account of the formation of DHS refer to CRS Report RL31549, Department of Homeland
Security: Consolidation of Border and Transportation Security Agencies
, by Jennifer E. Lake, and CRS Report
RL31560, Homeland Security Proposals: Issues Regarding Transfer of Immigration Agencies and Functions, by Lisa
Seghetti.
4 8 U.S.C. §1357 (a).
5 8 C.F.R. §287.5.
6 The USBP does not patrol the border between Alaska and Canada; for the purposes of this report the northern border
is the border between the contiguous United States and Canada.
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Organization and Composition
As an executive branch agency, most USBP initiatives are initially administrative measures.
However, the U.S. Congress has strongly supported many of them through the appropriations
process.
Evolution of the National Strategic Plan
In 1993, a study commissioned by the Office of National Drug Control Policy concluded that the
Southwest border was “being overrun,” noting as an example that 6,000 illegal immigrants
attempted to enter the United States every night along a 7.5-mile stretch of the San Diego border.
The study also concluded that drug smuggling was a serious threat all along the Southwest
border, and recommended that the then INS change its focus from arresting illegal immigrants to
preventing their entry.7 Partly in response to public and congressional concerns about the number
of illegal immigrants and drugs entering the country, in 1994 the USBP began implementing its
first National Strategic Plan (NSP).
Developed as an effort to gain and maintain control of the borders, the original NSP was a multi-
phased approach to deploying and focusing USBP resources on the areas of greatest illegal entry
of people and goods. The NSP called for a calibrated balance of personnel, aircraft, equipment,
technology, and tactical infrastructure. The focus of the NSP was an operational strategy known
as “Prevention Through Deterrence.” The strategy’s goal was to place USBP agents and resources
directly on the border in order to deter the entry of illegal aliens, rather than attempting to arrest
aliens after they have already entered the country (this had largely been the strategy prior).
According to CBP, achieving optimum deterrence would mean that increasing the number of
agents and resources in a sector would not result in an increase in the number of unauthorized
migrants apprehended in that sector.8 The “Prevention Through Deterrence” policy was embraced
by Congress, with both the House and Senate Appropriations Committees in 1996 directing the
INS to hire new agents, reallocate USBP agents stationed in the interior to front line duty, and
staff the interior offices with investigative staff instead.9
Phase I of the NSP involved the “Hold the Line” program in El Paso, TX, and Operation
Gatekeeper in San Diego, CA. In addition to placing more agents on the line, these operations
utilized landing mat fencing,10 stadium lighting, and cameras and sensors to deter and detect
unauthorized aliens. Phase II of the program included the expansion of Operation Safeguard
(1999) in Tucson, AZ, operation Rio Grande (1997) in the McAllen and Laredo sectors of Texas,
and an increased emphasis on securing the northern border. Phase III was set to involve the

7 U.S. General Accounting Office, Border Control: Revised Strategy Is Showing Some Positive Results, GAO/GGD-95-
30, December 1994, pp. 5-8.
8 U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Performance and Annual Report: Fiscal Year 2003, p. 41.
9 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Appropriations, Departments of Commerce, Justice, and State, The Judiciary,
and Related Agencies Appropriations Bill, 1996
, report to accompany H.R. 2076, 104th Cong., 1st sess., S.Rept. 104-
139 and U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, Making Appropriations for the Departments of
Commerce, Justice, and State, The Judiciary, and Related Agencies For the Fiscal Year Ending September 30, 1996,
and for Other Purposes
, report to accompany H.R. 2076, 104th Cong., 1st sess., H.Rept. 104-378.
10 Landing mat fencing is constructed from surplus Vietnam War era landing mats used to set up temporary landing
strips for airplanes.
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remaining areas of the Southwest border as well as the coastal waters around Florida and Puerto
Rico.
Although CBP maintained that the “Prevention Through Deterrence” strategy applied to both the
southwestern and northern borders, the mix of USBP resources used to enforce it differed
markedly between the borders. Along the Southwest border, the NSP emphasized the following
mix of resources in descending order of importance: personnel, equipment, technology, and
tactical infrastructure.11 The emphasis on personnel, equipment, and technology along the
Southwest border reflected the BP’s emphasis on stemming the flow of unauthorized immigrants
attempting to enter the United States from Mexico.
Conversely, the northern border emphasized a different mix of resources and activities:
intelligence, liaison, technology, equipment, and personnel last.12 The emphasis on intelligence
gathering and coordination with Canadian immigration and security agencies along the northern
border was due in part to the comparatively smaller amount of people attempting to cross over
illegally from Canada as well as the geographic enormity of the border. Additionally, it also
reflected the growing concern with terrorist infiltration.
In the wake of 9/11, the BP refocused its priorities to place greater emphasis on protecting against
terrorist penetration. As security efforts at official ports of entry become more sophisticated and
stringent, it is believed that terrorists and other criminals may attempt to illegally enter the
country between points of entry. In order to prevent and deter terrorist entry, the BP, in
conjunction with Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE’s) Anti-Smuggling Units and
CBP’s Office of Intelligence, focuses its intelligence and surveillance operations on known
smuggling operations that have previously trafficked aliens from significant interest countries.
Additionally, the agencies develop joint operations to target and disrupt these especially high-
interest smuggling activities.13 The BP also coordinates and shares intelligence with Canadian and
Mexican authorities along the northern and southwestern borders. It is important to note,
however, that the increased emphasis on preventing terrorist entry into the United States did not
change the scope of the BP’s mission—preventing unauthorized aliens from entering the country.
National Border Patrol Strategy
Shortly after the creation of DHS, the BP was directed to formulate a new National Border Patrol
Strategy (NS) that would better reflect the realities of the post 9/11 security landscape. In March
of 2005, the BP unveiled the current strategy, which places greater emphasis on interdicting
terrorists and features five main objectives:
• Establishing the substantial probability of apprehending terrorists and their
weapons as they attempt to enter illegally between the ports of entry;
• Deterring illegal entries through improved enforcement;
• Detecting, apprehending, and deterring smugglers of humans, drugs, and other
contraband;

11 U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Performance and Annual Report: Fiscal Year 2003.
12 U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Performance and Annual Report: Fiscal Year 2003.
13 Department of Homeland Security, Bureau of Customs and Border Protection, “Fact Sheet: U.S. Customs and Border
Protection—Protecting Our Southern Border Against the Terrorist Threat,” Fact Sheet, August 20, 2004.
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• Leveraging “Smart Border” technology to multiply the deterrent and enforcement
effect of agents;
• Reducing crime in border communities, thereby improving the quality of life and
economic vitality of those areas.14
The Border Patrol’s NS is an attempt to lay the foundation for achieving operational control over
the border. The Border Patrol defines operational control as “the ability to detect, respond, and
interdict border penetrations in areas deemed as high priority for threat potential or other national
security objectives.”15 The strategy places greater emphasis on a hierarchical and vertical
command structure, featuring a direct chain of command from HQ to the field. The NS builds on
the “Prevention Through Deterrence” strategy, but places added emphasis on enhancing the
Border Patrol’s ability to rapidly deploy its agents to respond to emerging threats. Tactical,
operational, and strategic intelligence is critical to this emphasis on rapid deployment, as it allows
the Border Patrol to assess risk and target its enforcement efforts. The Border Patrol believes that
much of this intelligence will be generated through the use of next generation surveillance
systems, including cameras, sensors, and other technologies. However, recent pilot programs of
these next-generation technologies have yielded mixed results. Additionally, the Border Patrol
coordinates closely with CBP’s Office of Intelligence and other DHS and Federal agencies’
intelligence apparatuses. Lastly, the Border Patrol National Strategy formulates different
strategies for each of the agency’s three operational theaters: the Southwest border, the northern
border, and the coastal waters around Florida and Puerto Rico; the northern and southern border
strategies will be discussed in detail subsequently.
Budget and Resources
The Border Patrol is headquartered in Washington, DC, and has 20 district or sector offices
throughout the country. Over the past two decades, border enforcement has increasingly become a
priority, with the border enforcement budget increasing sevenfold from 1980 to 1995 and then
more than tripling from 1995 to 2003.16 Figure 1 shows Border Patrol appropriations since fiscal
year (FY) 2000.17 Appropriations for the Border Patrol has grown steadily, from $1.06 billion in
FY2000 to $3.58 billion requested in FY2011—an increase of 238%. The bulk of this increase
has taken place since the formation of DHS in FY2003 and demonstrates Congress’s interest in
enhancing the security of the U.S. border post 9/11. Accompanying the budget increase, Border
Patrol manpower has more than doubled over the past decade. As of November 21, 2009, the
Border Patrol had 20,202 agents on board.18

14 Department of Homeland Security, Bureau of Customs and Border Protection, “National Border Patrol Strategy,”
March 1, 2005. Hereafter referred to as BP National Strategy.
15 BP National Strategy, p. 3.
16 Reyes, Johnson, and Van Swearingen: “Holding the Line? The Effect of the Recent Border Build-up on
Unauthorized Immigration,” Public Policy Institute of California, 2002, pp. v-vii.
17 Due to the manner in which the Border Patrol collects and organizes its data, all statistics presented in this report are
based on the Federal Fiscal Year, which begins October 1 and ends on September 30.
18 Staffing numbers provided by CBP Congressional Affairs, December 6, 2010.
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Figure 1. Border Patrol Appropriations
4,000
3,587
3,575
3,501
3,500
3,075
3,000
2,500
2,278
tion
a

2,000
1,778
ropri
p

1,538
p 1,500
A
1,271
1,339
1,146
1,055
1,000
500
N/A
0
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011*
Fiscal Year

Sources: Appropriations for FY2001 and FY2002 are from the Department of Justice, Immigration and
Naturalization Service, FY2002 Congressional Budget Justifications. For FY2004 through FY2011, this table
reflects the Border Security and Control Salaries and Expenses sub-account within the CBP Border Security and
Control account of the DHS Appropriation, as identified in the fol owing: H.Rept. 108-280 (FY2004); H.Rept.
108-774 (FY2005); H.Rept. 109-241 (FY2006); H.Rept. 109-699 (FY2007); and H.Rept. 111-298 (FY2010).
FY2008 enacted amounts are from Division E of P.L. 110-161, and tables in the Joint Explanatory Statement for
Division E, published in the Congressional Record, December 17, 2007, pp. H16107-H16121. FY2009 enacted
from the DHS Joint Explanatory Statement as submitted in the Congressional Record, and the House- and
Senate- enrolled version of H.R. 2638. The FY2011 funding represents the requested amount from the
Congressional Budget Justifications. FY2005 also includes a $124 million supplemental appropriation from P.L.
109-13. In FY2006, CBP also received $423 million in supplemental funding for Salaries and Expenses in P.L. 109-
234; however, the law did not identify how much of this funding would be for the Border Patrol and thus it has
not been included in this table. The FY2008 DHS Congressional Budget Justifications estimate that the FY2006
appropriation for the Border Patrol was $1,900 million.
Notes: * Denotes requested funding amount from the FY2011 Congressional Budget Justification, CBP. In FY2003,
immigration inspections from the former INS, Customs inspections from the former customs service, and the
Border Patrol were merged to form the Bureau of Customs and Border Protection within DHS. As a result, for
staffing and funding levels, the data for years prior to FY2003 may not be comparable with the data for FY2004
and after. Additional y, FY2001 and FY2002 numbers are from the INS FY2002 Congressional Budget
Justifications. They were pulled from a table that breaks out the elements of the larger Enforcement and Border
Affairs account within the agency’s appropriation. In FY2003, the INS did not provide a breakout of the sub-
accounts within the Enforcement and Border Affairs account in its Justifications; for this reason FY2003 numbers
are not available. DHS has not responded to requests for this data. Appropriations for the Enforcement and
Border Affairs account within INS for this period were as follows: $2,541 million in FY2001; $2,740 million in
FY2002; and $2,881 million in FY2003.
The Border Patrol also utilizes advanced technology to augment its agents’ ability to patrol the
border. The technologies used include, but are not limited to, sensors, light towers, mobile night
vision scopes, remote video surveillance (RVS) systems, directional listening devices, unmanned
aerial vehicles (UAVs), and various database systems. These so-called force multipliers allow the
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Border Patrol to deploy fewer agents in a specific area while maintaining the ability to detect and
counter intrusions
Surveillance Assets (Secure Border Initiative)
Perhaps the most important technology used by the Border Patrol are the surveillance assets
currently in place at the border. The program has gone through several iterations and name
changes. Originally known as the Integrated Surveillance Information System (ISIS), the
program’s name was changed to the America’s Shield Initiative (ASI) in FY2005. DHS
subsequently folded ASI into the Secure Border Initative (SBI) and renamed the program SBInet
Technology (SBInet). Once it is beyond the pilot phase, SBInet will, according to DHS, develop
and install “new integrated technology solutions to provide enhanced detection, tracking,
response, and situational awareness capabilities.”19 The other program under SBI is the SBI
Tactical Infrastructure program, which, according to DHS, “develops and installs physical
components designed to consistently slow, delay, and be an obstacle to illegal cross-border
activity.”20
In the late 1990s, the Border Patrol began deploying a network of Remote Video Surveillance
(RVS) systems (i.e., camera systems), underground sensors, and the Integrated Computer Assisted
Detection (ICAD) database into a multi-faceted network designed to detect illegal entries in a
wide range of climate conditions. This Integrated Surveillance Intelligence System (ISIS)
attempted to ensure seamless coverage of the border by combining the feeds from multiple color,
thermal, and infrared cameras mounted on different structures into one remote-controlled system
with information generated by sensors (including seismic, magnetic, and thermal detectors).
When a sensor is tripped, an alarm is sent to a central communications control room at a USBP
station or sector headquarters. USBP personnel monitoring the control room screens use the
ICAD system to re-position RVS cameras towards the location where the sensor alarm was
tripped (although some camera positions are fixed and cannot be panned). Control room
personnel then alert field agents to the intrusion and coordinate the response.
In FY2005, the General Services Administration’s Inspector General (GSA IG) released a report
that criticized the USBP for its contracting practices regarding RVS system. The GSA IG found
that the contracts were granted without competition, and that in many cases the contractor failed
to deliver the services that were stipulated within the contract, leading to RVS sites not being
operational in a timely manner. In a 2005 report, the DHS Inspector General (DHS IG) noted that
deficiencies in contract management and processes resulted in 169 incomplete RVS sites.
ISIS was folded into a broader border surveillance system named the America’s Shield Initiative
(ASI) by DHS in 2005. However, DHS Inspector General (IG) Richard Skinner stated in
congressional testimony on December 16, 2005, that “to date, ISIS components have not been
integrated to the level predicted at the onset of the program. RVS cameras and sensors are not
linked whereby a sensor alert automatically activates a corresponding RVS camera to pan and tilt
in the direction of the triggered sensor. However, even if ISIS was fully integrated, due to a
limited number of operational RVS sites (255 nationwide), integration opportunities would be

19 Customs and Border Protection, “SBI Programs,” November 10, 2008, at http://www.cbp.gov/xp/cgov/
border_security/sbi/about_sbi/sbi_programs.xml.
20 Ibid.
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limited to the areas near these sites.”21 Additionally, the DHS IG noted in its 2005 report that, due
to a lack of integration, “ISIS remote surveillance technology yielded few apprehensions as a
percentage of detection.”
For these reasons, in FY2006, Congress withdrew support for ASI’s expansion. The conferees to
the DHS Appropriations Act stated that it was their understanding that DHS was currently
reviewing the entire ASI program, and that major procurement for the program might be curtailed
until DHS “resolved fundamental questions about scope and architecture, and possibly its relation
to overall, nationwide border domain security and awareness.”22 The conferees noted that they
expected to be kept informed of the results of this review and encouraged DHS to explore the use
of off-the-shelf solutions for the program.
In FY2007, DHS folded ASI into a new, broader program known as the Secure Border Initiative
(SBI). In its FY2007 budget submission, DHS asserted that it had “developed a three-pillar
approach under the SBI that will focus on controlling the border, building a robust interior
enforcement program, and establishing a Temporary Worker Program.”23 The border surveillance
and infrastructure component of the SBI program came to be known as SBInet and SBI Tactical
Infrastructure. DHS noted that these programs would initially focus on the Southwest land border
between official ports of entry and that it would deploy a mix of personnel, technology,
infrastructure, and response assets in order to “provide maximum tactical advantage in each
unique border environment.”24
However, the SBInet program has encountered a number of issues during the past several years.
Congress has repeatedly requested detailed spending plans from DHS for the program. The
Government Accountability Office (GAO) concluded in September 2008 that “important aspects
of SBInet remain ambiguous and in a continued state of flux, making it unclear and uncertain
what technology capabilities will be delivered, when and where they will be delivered, and how
they will be delivered.”25 In particular, GAO criticized DHS for having narrowed the scope of the
program while simultaneously failing to meet its deadlines. GAO noted that, in December 2006,
DHS had committed itself to having a suite of capabilities operational along the entire Southwest
border by the end of 2008 (this has been called a “virtual fence” by some in Congress). However,
“in March 2008, the SBInet System Program Office had reduced its commitment to deploying a
to-be-determined set of technology capabilities to three out of nine sectors along the Southwest
border by 2011 and to only two locations in one of nine sectors by the end of 2008.”26 However,
this timeline has been pushed back once more as deployment dates have repeatedly slipped and a
full deployment date remains uncertain.27 In early 2010, Secretary Napolitano ordered a

21 Testimony of DHS Inspector General Richard L. Skinner before the House Homeland Security Committee,
Subcommittee on Management, Integration, and Oversight, New Secure Border Initiative, 109th Cong., 1st sess.,
December 16, 2005.
22 H.Rept. 109-241, p. 44.
23 Department of Homeland Security, DHS FY2007 Congressional Budget Justification, p. CBP S&E 4.
24 Department of Homeland Security, DHS FY2008 Congressional Budget Justification, p. CBP BSFIT 3.
25 Government Accountability Office, Secure Border Initiative: DHS Needs to Address Significant Risks in Delivering
Key Technology Investment
, GAO-08-1086, September 22, 2008, p. 2. Hereafter referred to as GAO SBInet Report.
26 GAO SBInet Report, p. 3.
27 GAO SBInet Report, p. 3.
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department-wide assessment of the SBInet technology project, but stated that she would continue
to support the deployment of border supervision and protection technologies.28
Congress has been critical of the program in the appropriations process. In FY2007, the first year
SBI programs were funded, Congress appropriated $1.5 billion29 for fencing, infrastructure, and
technology at the border, but included a provision requiring the DHS IG to evaluate all contracts
or task orders over $20 million awarded in conjunction with SBI projects.30 In FY2008, Congress
expressed concern with the overall coordination of the SBI program and directed DHS to provide
a briefing within 120 days of enactment on how the program is being effectively coordinated and
how the FY2007 funds that were appropriated for the Office of Secure Border Coordination in
FY2007 were obligated. The Appropriations Act provided $1,225 million for SBI programs, but
withheld $650 million until an expenditure plan was received and approved.31 In FY2009, P.L.
110-329 fully funded the President’s request of $775 million for SBI programs, but once again
voiced concerns about the program’s implementation and withheld a portion of the appropriation
($400 million) from obligation until a 12-point expenditure plan is submitted and approved by the
House and Senate Committees on Appropriations.32 The Administration requested $574 million
for the deployment of SBI technologies and infrastructures in FY2011, a decrease of $226 million
from the FY2010-enacted level of $800 million.33
Automated Biometrics Identification System (IDENT)
In 1989, Congress authorized the INS to develop an automated fingerprint-based system to
identify and track aliens.34 The system was conceived to identify those aliens who are serial
border crossers and to identify criminal aliens. In 1994, Congress appropriated large sums for the
INS to develop and deploy a biometric database which grew into the IDENT system. IDENT was
first deployed in the San Diego sector of the Border Patrol; by the end of 1995 it was installed at
52 Southwest border sites; by the end of 1999 it was deployed at 408 INS sites including all
Border Patrol stations.35
Today, the Border Patrol continues to use IDENT to identify and track illegal aliens. IDENT
combines a photograph, two flat fingerprints, and biographical data into two databases which can

28 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, The Homeland Security
Department’s Budget Submission for Fiscal Year 2011
, 111th Cong., 1st sess., February 24, 2010.
29 Of this total, $1.2 billion comes from the FY2007 DHS Appropriation Act, P.L. 109-295, and $300 million comes
from the Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Act, P.L. 109-234.
30 H.Rept. 109-699, p. 124.
31 Division E of P.L. 110-161.
32 This spending plan should include 12 specific components, among them: a detailed accounting of the program’s
implementation to date; a description of how the expenditure plan allocates funding to the highest priority border
security needs, addresses northern border security needs, and works towards obtaining operational control of the entire
border; certifications by the Chief Procurement Officer and the Chief Information Officer at DHS; an analysis, for each
15 miles of fencing or tactical infrastructure, of how the selected approach compares to other alternative means of
achieving operational control; and a review by the Government Accountability Office. H.R. 2638, as Enrolled by the
House and the Senate, pp. 83-84.
33 FY2011 DHS Congressional Budget Justifications, the FY2011 DHS Budget in Brief.
34 Immigration Act of 1990 (P.L. 101-649), Sec. 503 (b).
35 U.S. Department of Justice, Office of the Inspector General, The Rafael Resendez-Ramirez Case: A Review of the
INS’s Actions and the Operation of Its IDENT Automated Fingerprint Identification System
, USDOJ/OIG Special
Report, March 2000, Appendix B.
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be used to track repeat entrants and better identify criminal aliens. The INS settled on a two-
fingerprint-based system because it was deemed adequate for identification purposes and also due
to concerns about the time it would take to process the thousands of aliens apprehended each day
with a 10-rolled fingerprint system. This has made the IDENT system difficult to integrate with
criminal databases such as the FBI’s Integrated Automated Fingerprint Identification System
(IAFIS), which are based on a 10-rolled fingerprint database (IDENT/IAFIS integration will be
discussed in more detail later in this report)
The IDENT system is administered in the field by Border Patrol agents using a dedicated
workstation that features a digital camera and an electronic fingerprint scanner. After an alien’s
two fingerprints, photograph, and biographical information are entered into the IDENT
workstation, the system electronically sends the information to the main IDENT database at the
Justice Data Center. The fingerprints are then checked against the two separate databases that
form the integral part of the IDENT system: the lookout and recidivist databases. The biometric
information entered into the system is first checked against the lookout database of criminal
aliens. Aliens are entered into the lookout database if they are convicted of an aggravated felony,
multiple crimes, or crimes of moral turpitude; are known or suspected to be narcotics, weapons,
or human smugglers; or are inadmissible due to security concerns (including terrorists) or other
related grounds. If the alien registers as a hit on the lookout database, Border Patrol agents are
authorized to arrest and remand them to the proper authorities.
The fingerprints are also checked against a recidivist database of aliens that have been
apprehended trying to enter the country multiple times. Each time an alien is apprehended, his
picture, fingerprints, and biographical information are added to the recidivist database. IDENT
takes about two minutes to search both databases for an apprehended alien’s fingerprints. When a
potential match is determined, the IDENT terminal will display the fingerprints, photographs, and
biographical information of the apprehended alien and the possible matches. The Border Patrol
agent is then responsible for determining, based on his examination of the fingerprints and
photographs, whether the match is in fact correct.36 Most aliens are apprehended five to ten times
before they are charged with misdemeanor illegal entry. Once an alien has been charged with a
misdemeanor entry, the next apprehension brings a felony entry charge.37
Lastly, interoperable IDENT/IAFIS workstations been deployed to all Border Patrol stations.38
This allows Border Patrol agents to check the FBI’s database of criminal fingerprints and
outstanding warrants in order to ascertain whether the apprehended alien has committed a
criminal offense somewhere in the country. At the end of FY2009, IDENT stored more than 106
million fingerprint records of individuals and contained biometric data for legitimate travelers to
the United States, immigration benefit seekers, and immigration violators.39

36 U.S. Department of Justice, Office of the Inspector General, Status of IDENT/IAFIS Integration, USDOJ/OIG I-
2003-05, p. 3.
37 CRS Report RL32366, Terrorist Identification, Screening, and Tracking Under Homeland Security Presidential
Directive 6
, by William J. Krouse.
38 From CBP Congressional Affairs.
39 U.S. Department of Homeland Security, FY2011 Congressional Budget Justifications, US-VISIT, p. US-VISIT-1.
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Apprehensions Statistics
Apprehensions have long been used as a performance measure by the Border Patrol. However,
the number of apprehensions may be a misleading statistic for the reasons discussed below:
Multiple Apprehensions
Border Patrol data are limited by their focus on events (i.e., apprehensions) rather than people;
thus if one unauthorized migrant is caught trying to enter the country three times in one year he
would count as three apprehensions in the data set. The Border Patrol has not released any data
concerning how many unauthorized aliens are apprehended multiple times each year. This could
mean that apprehensions statistics overstate the actual number of people trying to cross the
border.
Successful Illegal Entries
There are no reliable estimates for how many aliens successfully evade capture and enter the
country. Most estimates cited calculate the growth in the unauthorized migrant population in the
United States; as such they cannot take into account the number of unauthorized migrants who
enter the country, stay temporarily, and then leave. For example, the number of unauthorized
immigrants living in the United States grew by 500,000 people a year, from 3.5 million in 1990 to
10.8 million in 2009.40 However, these data are limited. Most estimates of the unauthorized
population derive from the Current Population Survey, which does not ask about legal status but
does ask whether someone is a citizen.41 Since unauthorized immigrants often enter and leave the
country many times, this figure, and others like it, probably understate the number of people
successfully entering the country each year. Lastly, there is no way of knowing what percentage
of the people here illegally entered the country through the land border, and what percentage
entered through a port of entry but then overstayed their visa.
Multiple Correlations
It is impossible to gauge, solely from apprehensions data, whether increases or decreases in
apprehensions are due to unauthorized migration patterns or border enforcement policies. An
increase in apprehensions could be due to an increase in the number of unauthorized migrants
attempting to enter the country. The same increase could also be due to increased patrolling of the
border, as the additional agents make more arrests. Or it could be due to both an increase in the
number of people attempting to illegally enter the country and increased patrolling. Lastly, it
could be due to neither, and merely be a statistical anomaly.
Apprehensions data are thus a fairly unreliable gauge of how many people are attempting to enter
the country illegally. Apprehensions data are valuable, however, in that they provide a glimpse at
the trends on the ground along the border. While caution should be taken when attempting to
draw conclusions about the efficacy of policy measures based solely on apprehension statistics,

40 For more information about estimates of the unauthorized population in the United States, please refer to CRS Report
RL33874, Unauthorized Aliens Residing in the United States: Estimates Since 1986, by Ruth Ellen Wasem.
41 These estimates use a residual methodology to estimate the population (i.e., the estimated population remaining after
citizens and authorized aliens are accounted for).
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apprehensions nevertheless represent the best information available concerning the number of
people attempting to enter the country illegally.
Southwest Border
Prevention Through Deterrence In Action
The Border Patrol divides the Southwest border into nine operational sectors: two in California,
two in Arizona, and five in Texas. Spanning from the Pacific Ocean to the Gulf of Mexico, the
1,952-mile Southwest border has long been the flash point for illegal immigration into the United
States: since FY2000, 98.7% of all illegal alien apprehensions by the Border Patrol were made
along the Southwest border. DHS, in the Border Patrol National Strategy (NS), notes that while
many classify these aliens as “economic migrants,” an “ever present threat exists from the
potential for terrorists to employ the same smuggling and transportation networks, infrastructure,
drop houses, and other support and then use these masses of illegal aliens as ‘cover’ for a
successful cross-border penetration.”42
As previously mentioned, the perceived success of operations Gatekeeper and Hold the Line led
to “Prevention Through Deterrence” being adopted as the Border Patrol’s operational strategy in
the 1990s. The NS for the Southwest border continues to expand the Prevention Through
Deterrence strategy while incorporating rapid response capabilities. Today, about 85% of Border
Patrol agents are deployed along the Southwest border with Mexico. This deployment reflects the
Border Patrol’s goal of rerouting the illegal border traffic from traditional urban routes to less
populated and geographically harsher areas, providing Border Patrol agents with a tactical
advantage over illegal border crossers and smugglers.
Southern Border Manpower
Figure 2 shows that Border Patrol agent manpower assigned to the Southwest border has been
increasing steadily since the early 1990s. In 1992, there were 3,555 agents assigned to the
southern border, by 2000 that number had increased by 141% to 8,580. Since 2000, the number of
agents assigned to the southern border has continued to increase, more than doubling once more
to 20,119 agents at the end of FY2009. The rapid and steady increase of Border Patrol agents
assigned to the southern border reflects the ongoing interest in Congress in stemming the tide of
illegal immigration. The FY2011 Budget Request, however, includes a requested reduction of 181
Border Patrol agents.43

42 Department of Homeland Security, Bureau of Customs and Border Protection, “National Border Patrol Strategy,”
March 1, 2005, p.5.
43 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, The Homeland Security
Department’s Budget Submission for Fiscal Year 2011
, 111th Cong., 1st sess., February 24, 2010.
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Figure 2. Southwest Border Agent Manpower
18,000
16,000
14,000
ents 12,000
g
A
P
10,000
B
S
t U

8,000
s
e

6,000
Southw
4,000
2,000
0
1992
1994
1996
1998
2000
2002
2004
2006
2008
Fiscal Year

Source: CBP Congressional Affairs.
Southwest Border Apprehensions
The impact of the “Prevention Through Deterrence” strategy has been difficult to gauge. There is
considerable evidence that it has made border crossing more challenging, expensive, and
dangerous for illegal aliens. However, the total number of aliens apprehended increased steadily
from 1994 to 2000 even as the number of personnel and resources deployed along the border
more than doubled. It is possible that the increased presence of agents and resources stationed on
the border led the Border Patrol to apprehend more unauthorized aliens, accounting for the
increase in apprehensions. It is also possible that the increase in apprehensions during that period
instead reflects an increase in the number of people trying to enter the country in order to benefit
from the quickly growing economy of the mid to late 1990s. Figure 3 shows the recent trends in
Border Patrol apprehensions along the Southwest border. Border Patrol apprehensions increased
steadily through the late 1990s, reaching a peak of 1.65 million in 2000. From 2000 to 2003
apprehensions have declined steadily, reaching a low of 905,065 in 2003. In FY2004 and
FY2005, apprehensions increased by 26% to 1.17 million. Since FY2005, however,
apprehensions have declined steadily to a 17-year low of 540,865 in FY2009. This decline may
be due to the increased enforcement along the Southwest border; the number of agents assigned
to the southern border has increased roughly fivefold since 1992. However, it is important to note
here that the past three years have seen the U.S. economy slow significantly, especially in the real
estate construction market, which has long been perceived to be an industry penetrated by
unauthorized migrant labor. The dramatic decline in apprehensions from 2000 to 2009 is likely
the result of a combination of increasing enforcement at the border and decreased opportunities
for work in the United States.
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Figure 3. Southwest Border Apprehensions
Millions
1.8
1.6
1.4
1.2
1.0
ehensions 0.8
ppr
A
0.6
0.4
0.2
0.0
1992
1994
1996
1998
2000
2002
2004
2006
2008
Fiscal Year

Source: CRS Presentation of CBP Data.
Analysis of apprehensions by Southwest border sectors reveals that the “Prevention Through
Deterrence” strategy has apparently accomplished its goal of rerouting unauthorized aliens away
from urban areas and towards more remote areas of the Southwest border, making the journey
more difficult for aliens and thereby affording the Border Patrol with more time to make the
apprehension. In Figure 4, Border Patrol data show that throughout the late 1990s apprehensions
decreased significantly along the more populated California and Texas sectors, instead pushing
out into the less populated areas of the Arizona desert along the Tucson sector. Apprehensions in
the Tucson sector rose dramatically in last years of the 1990s even as they declined in the
traditional hot-spots of San Diego, El Paso, and Rio Grande Valley. Following their peak in 2000,
apprehensions in the Tucson sector declined markedly from 2001 through 2003 as the Border
Patrol began concentrating assets in the sector. However, in FY2004 apprehensions in the Tucson
sector exceeded the FY2002 and 2003 totals. FY2004 apprehensions in the neighboring Yuma
sector of Arizona also surpassed the totals from the each of the previous two years. Some argue
that the increase in apprehensions in FY2004 may have been due to the President’s proposed
legalization plan for illegal immigrant workers, which may have given would-be immigrants an
incentive to enter the country.44 DHS maintains that the increase in apprehensions was due to the
increase in agents assigned to line-watch duty along the Arizona border as a result of the Arizona
Border Control initiative.45 Overall, Arizona accounted for 52% of all apprehensions along the
Southwest border in FY2004, and for 76% of the overall national increase in apprehensions in
between FY2003 and FY2004. Since FY2005, however, this dynamic has changed somewhat.

44 Dinan, Stephen; “Bush ‘amnesty’ blamed for rise in illegals,” The Washington Times, April 16, 2004.
45 Department of Homeland Security, “Fact Sheet: Arizona Border Control Initiative.” September 21, 2004.
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Apprehensions have decreased in Tucson and Yuma sectors, largely keeping pace with the overall
reduction in apprehensions nationwide. Apprehensions in San Diego, however, have been
increasing since 2001. This suggests that the increasing enforcement along the Arizona border has
begun to shift the pattern of unauthorized migration back to California.

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Figure 4. Southwest Border Apprehensions, by Sector
700,000
600,000
500,000
s
400,000
ion
s
n
e
h
e

300,000
ppr
A

200,000
100,000
0
San Diego CA El Centro CA
Tucson AZ
Yuma AZ
El Paso TX
Marfa TX
Del Rio TX
Laredo TX
Rio Grande
Valley TX
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009

Source: CRS Presentation of CBP Data.
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Another way to conceptualize the flow of unauthorized migration along the southern border is to
look at total apprehensions by state.46 Figure 4 shows the changing patterns of unauthorized
migration along the Southwest border. In the early 1990s, California and Texas accounted for
over 90% of all apprehensions made. As the Border Patrol implemented its Prevention Through
Deterrence strategy, including constructing the border fence in San Diego and deploying agents
directly along the border in more populated areas, apprehensions in California began decreasing
steadily while apprehensions in Arizona began increasing steadily. Even though overall
apprehensions have declined over the past four years, Arizona’s percentage of the total has
remained stable, right around 46%. Interestingly, the pattern of unauthorized migration appears to
be shifting back to California to some extent. As previously mentioned, this suggests that, as the
Arizona border crossing has become increasingly hardened through the deployment of agents and
infrastructure, unauthorized migrants are probing other parts of the border in an effort to find
easier crossing routes. This appears to have been the central theme of unauthorized migration
over the past two decades: aliens are continually trying to find the least difficult entry point into
the United States, and as enforcement efforts harden one part of the border the flow of
unauthorized migration shifts to other sectors.
Figure 5. Percentage of Southern Border Apprehensions, by State
Arizona Sectors
California Sectors
Texas Sectors
60%
50%
40%
ions
s
n
e
30%
h
20%
Appre
10%
0%
1992
1994
1996
1998
2000
2002
2004
2006
2008
Fiscal Year

Source: CRS Presentation of CBP Data.

46 New Mexico shares a border with Mexico but does not have its own Border Patrol sector. Instead, the Border Patrol’s
El Paso sector has the responsibility for patrolling the New Mexico section of the border.
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Border Safety Initiative
As noted earlier, the “Prevention Through Deterrence” strategy has pushed unauthorized
migration away from population centers and funneled it into more remote and hazardous border
regions. This policy has had the unintended consequence of increasing the number of fatalities
along the border, as unauthorized migrants attempt to cross over the inhospitable Arizona desert
without adequate supplies of water. In June 1998 the Border Patrol launched the Border Safety
Initiative (BSI) in part to address concerns about the increasing number of migrant deaths along
the border.
BSI is a binational campaign focused on decreasing the dangers involved in crossing the
hazardous Southwest border. As part of BSI, the Border Patrol releases television and radio
advertisements and distributes posters educating would-be unauthorized aliens about the dangers
involved with crossing the border. The Border Patrol also maintains water stations in the desert
and deploys specialized rescue teams to save distressed aliens. Additionally, the Border Patrol has
trained over 1,320 Mexican firefighters and law enforcement personnel in sophisticated search
and rescue techniques and cooperates with the Mexican government to disrupt smuggling
routes.47
BSI consists of four main elements: prevention, search and rescue, identification, and tracking
and recording. The prevention piece stresses cooperation with Mexican authorities in order to
identify the most dangerous crossing areas along the border and discourage illegal crossings
there; it also includes setting up water stations and rescue beacons in the desert and posting
warning signs at border crossings. The search and rescue aspect focuses on deploying rescue
teams to those areas along the border where the terrain and dangers involved with the crossing
may lead illegal migrants to become lost or incapacitated. The identification piece involves
establishing procedures and resources to help officials on both sides of the border identify those
migrants who died attempting to cross the border; in 1999 36% of the 369 migrants who died
attempting to cross into the United States were unidentified. And lastly, the Border Patrol
maintains an Incident Tracking System to collect and maintain BSI-related data.48
Border Patrol Search, Trauma, and Rescue (BORSTAR) teams form an important part of BSI.
The teams are composed of agents who volunteer to undergo a highly specialized and rigorous
training regimen that includes physical fitness, emergency medical skills, technical rescue,
navigation, communication, swift-water rescue, and air operation rescues. BORSTAR’s primary
mission is to respond to all incidents involving distressed people along the border. While the
individuals rescued are typically illegal aliens, BORSTAR teams have also rescued American
citizens who reside along the border as well as Border Patrol agents. The types of rescues
attempted by BORSTAR teams vary depending on the geography, climate, and the time of year;
they can be as simple as locating victims and providing them with water, and as complex as
rappelling into remote canyons to assist victims and extract them by helicopter. In the first three
years the initiative was operational, Border Patrol agents rescued 3,977 people along the
Southwest border. As of FY2008 there were 210 specially trained Border Patrol agents deployed
in BORSTAR teams.49

47 U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Bureau of Customs and Border Protection, “US Customs and Border
Protection Announces Border Safety Initiative Aimed at Preventing Migrant Deaths,” press release, May 6, 2004.
48 The American Immigration Law Center, “Border Safety Initiative,” February 25, 2003.
49 From Border Patrol data provided by CBP Congressional Affairs.
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Interior Repatriation Program
In 1996, Congress authorized the then INS to create an Interior Repatriation program to return
apprehended unauthorized Mexican aliens to the interior of the country as part of the
Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (P.L. 104-132; sec. 437). Eight years later, on June
9, 2004, the White House announced it had reached agreement with the Mexican government to
begin implementing the Interior Repatriation Program. The Interior Repatriation pilot program is
a departure from the current practice of returning aliens to the Mexican side of the border, and
aims to reduce the number of aliens who immediately try to cross back into the United States.
Due to constitutional constraints in Mexico, the apprehended aliens’ return to the interior must be
strictly voluntary and the willingness of their participation will be certified by Mexican consular
officers.50 The program ran through September 2004 and was estimated to cost $13 million,
which covered airfare to Mexico City or Guadalajara and bus transport from there to the aliens’
hometowns. 51 The first repatriation flight landed on July 12, 2004, in Guadalajara and had 138
migrants on board.52 The program was renewed each year from FY2004 through FY2009, U.S.
and Mexican officials have jointly administered this program to return at least 82,558 Mexican
nationals from the Arizona-Sonora desert to the interior of Mexico.53 Program renewal for
FY2010 has not yet been announced.
Northern Border
U.S.-Canadian Cooperation
Before September 11, the United States prided itself on having the longest open border in the
world: the northern border with Canada, spanning 12 states and over 4,000 miles.54 Today,
Americans as well as Canadians have come to understand that open borders are rare precisely
because they are a luxury. Given the ever-present threat of terrorism, officials in both countries
have noted that cooperation between American and Canadian authorities at the border has become
more important than ever.55 As a result of this, in December 2001 then-Director of Homeland
Security Tom Ridge and then-Canadian Minister of Foreign Affairs John Manley signed “The
Smart Border Declaration,” a 30-point action plan designed among other things to coordinate law
enforcement operations, enhance intelligence sharing, improve the border infrastructure,
coordinate visa policy, and create compatible immigration databases. One year after the

50 U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Bureau of Customs and Border Protection, Office of the Press Secretary,
“Department of Homeland Security to Begin Pilot Program for Voluntary Interior Repatriation of Mexican Nationals,”
press release, June 29, 2004.
51 Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar, “U.S., Mexico OK Deportation by Air; Illegal migrants caught in Arizona could agree to
return to their hometowns in the interior instead of just recrossing the border,” The Los Angeles Times, June 9, 2004, p.
A11.
52 Chris Kraul, “Unauthorized aliens Receive a One-Way Ticket to Mexico,” The Los Angeles Times, July 13, 2004, p.
A1.
53 Immigration and Customs Enforcement, “United States and Mexico Resume Voluntary Interior Repatriation
Program,” August 24, 2009.
54 This does not include the 1,500 mile border with Alaska. The Border Patrol does not patrol the Canada-Alaska
border.
55 For an expanded discussion of northern border security issues, please refer to CRS Report RS21258, Border
Security: U.S.-Canada Immigration Border Issues
, by Lisa M. Seghetti.
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declaration, Ridge and Manley highlighted the progress made by emphasizing the opening of Free
and Secure Trade (FAST) lanes to speed legitimate commerce across the border and the creation
of two new binational Integrated Border Enforcement Teams (IBET). Significant progress has
also been made vis-à-vis increasing the compatibility of immigration databases and biometric
standards, as well as the sharing of data and intelligence.56
The Border Patrol’s northern border strategy focuses on safeguarding national security by
preventing the entry of terrorists and reducing cross-border crime and smuggling. In order to
accomplish this, the Border Patrol places emphasis on cooperation with other government and
Canadian authorities and the use of enhanced intelligence gathering through the deployment of
technology and equipment such as cameras and remote sensors. The goal of these activities is to
identify threat areas and the resources required to mitigate the threats. Improving the mobility of
agents in order to respond rapidly to identified threats is key to the new northern border strategy.57
This difference in strategy, compared to the Southwest border, is due to the enormity of the
northern border, its varied and challenging geography, and the general lack of large American
population centers along the border.58 Additionally, the emphasis on intelligence and cooperation
with Canada reflects the concern that terrorists may attempt to infiltrate the United States along
the sparsely defended northern border. In their report, the 9/11 Commission noted that prior to the
terrorist attacks the northern border received very little attention from Congress or the White
House “[d]espite examples of terrorists entering from Canada, awareness of terrorist activity in
Canada and its more lenient immigration laws.”59
Northern Border Manpower
The issue of Border Patrol staffing along the northern border has been closely examined over the
past 10 years. In 2000, the Department of Justice’s Office of the Inspector General (OIG)
criticized the Border Patrol’s northern border practices. The OIG concluded that the allocation of
manpower and technological resources to the northern border was insufficient, that the Border
Patrol had no reliable means of gauging the level of illegal activity along the border, and that the
Border Patrol was unable to adequately respond to the illegal activity it was able to identify.60 In
February 2002, the OIG released a follow-up report concluding that post 9/11 the Border Patrol
had taken strides toward addressing the deficiencies along northern border but was still drastically
understaffed and unable to adequately perform its duties. Specifically, the OIG opined that the
enhanced cooperation between the United States and Canada reflected by the IBET program, and
the increases in technology such as sensor systems, night vision devices, computer systems, and
vehicles, were significant improvements over the previous report. However, the OIG also pointed

56 Deborah Waller Meyers; Does ‘Smarter’ Lead to Safer? An Assessment of the Border Accords with Canada and
Mexico
, Migration Policy Institute, June 2003, pp. 3-6.
57 Department of Homeland Security, Bureau of Customs and Border Protection, “National Border Patrol Strategy,”
March 1, 2005, p.17.
58 U.S. Department of Justice, Office of the Inspector General, Follow up Report on Border Patrol’s Efforts to Improve
Northern Border Security,
OIG Report No. I-2002-004, February 2002.
59 The 9/11 Commission Report, Final Report of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States,
U.S. Government Printing Office, July 2004, p. 81.
60 U.S. Department of Justice, Office of the Inspector General, Follow up Report on Border Patrol’s Efforts to Improve
Northern Border Security,
OIG Report No. I-2002-004, February 2002.
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out that many Border Patrol stations were still unable to operate 24 hours a day in 2002 and that
the communications system was still inadequate.
In response to these criticisms and to the terrorist attacks of September 11, the USA PATRIOT
Act of 2001 (P.L. 107-56) authorized tripling the number of Border Patrol agents and increasing
and improving the monitoring technology along the northern border. Figure 6 shows the history
of northern border manpower for the Border Patrol. From 1992 until 2000, manpower at the
northern border hovered around 300 agents each fiscal year. In the years following, the Border
Patrol significantly increased the number of agents deployed to the northern border in response to
the OIG criticism and congressional concerns, from 340 agents deployed in FY2001 to 1,008 in
FY2005, meeting the PATRIOT Act mandate to triple the northern border manpower.
Figure 6. Border Patrol Agents at the Northern Border
2,500
2,000
ts 1,500
n
e

BP Ag 1,000
US
500
0
1992
1994
1996
1998
2000
2002
2004
2006
2008
Fiscal Year

Source: CRS Presentation of CBP Data.
Despite the tripling of the Border Patrol’s northern border workforce in the years after 9/11,
Congress remained concerned that there were not enough agents assigned to the border. In 2006,
the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act (P.L. 108-458) required that 20% of the
Border Patrol’s annual increases in manpower be assigned to the northern border. However, the
number of agents assigned to the northern border did not increase by 20% in FY2006 or FY2007,
remaining around 1,000 agents even as the overall Border Patrol workforce increased by 35%.
The appropriations committees repeatedly admonished DHS for failing to adhere to the
requirements of P.L. 108-458. As of November 21, 2009, the number of agents assigned to the
northern border increased stood at 2,069, an increase of 1,061 since the IRTPA mandate.
However, during this same time period the Border Patrol’s manpower has increased by 8,855.
Consequently, the northern border increase in agents represents 12% of the overall increase from
FY2006 to FY2010, falling considerably short of the 20% requirement enacted by IRTPA.
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Integrated Border Enforcement Teams (IBET)
The IBET program focuses on sharing intelligence and enforcement resources between American
and Canadian agencies along the northern border in order to address terrorism and identify,
interdict, and apprehend persons who pose a threat to national security or who engage in other
cross-border criminal activity. In order to accomplish this goal, the Border Patrol collaborates
with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), Citizenship and Immigration Canada, and
Canada Customs and Revenue Agency as well as other American agencies involved such as the
Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the Coast Guard. IBET’s mission is
focused on three mutually agreed upon priorities: (1) national security, (2) organized crime, and
(3) other cross-border illegal activity.61
IBET divides the U.S.-Canada border into 14 geographic regions, establishing international Joint
Management Teams (JMT) in each region. These JMTs are comprised of senior agents from each
participating Canadian and American agency and focus on sharing intelligence and information.
The JMTs are responsible for determining regional operational priorities; developing local
operational plans and practices; establishing local joint intelligence committees to expedite the
sharing of information; reviewing and assessing operational effectiveness; and reporting to the
national IBET Coordination Team. Additionally, a permanent Border Patrol Agent position has
been assigned to RCMP headquarters in Ottawa, Canada, to serve as a liaison between the
agencies.62
Northern Border Apprehensions
CRS analysis of Border Patrol data presented in Figure 7 reveals that apprehensions along the
northern border declined gradually from FY1997 to FY2009, reaching a low of 6,380 in FY2007.
In FY2009, the number of northern border apprehensions was 6,806. Given the relatively low
numbers of individuals being apprehended along the northern border, it is difficult to draw firm
conclusions about what these small decreases and increases mean. The overall decline in
apprehensions suggests that the increasing enforcement along the northern border may have
discouraged individuals from attempting to cross. However, given the enormousness of the
northern border and the relative lack of enforcement assets that are deployed there, compared to
the Southwest border, the declining trend in apprehensions over the past 12 years could well be
the result of other, unrelated factors.

61 U.S. Congress, House Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on Immigration, Border Security, and Claims,
“America’s Response to Terrorism: Use of Immigration-Related Tools to Fight Terrorism,” Prepared Statement of
Jayson P. Ahern, Assistant Commissioner of Field Operations, Bureau of Customs and Border Protection, May 8, 2003.
62 Information provided by CBP Congressional Affairs.
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Figure 7. Northern Border Apprehensions
14,000
12,000
10,000
s
n
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8,000
si
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reh
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p
A

4,000
2,000
0
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
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2006
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2009
Fiscal Year

Source: CRS Presentation of CBP Data.
Border Patrol Issues for Congress
9/11 Report and the Northern Border
The 9/11 Commission Report focused its criticism of the Border Patrol on its lack of a coherent
policy regarding the northern border. The report noted that Congress, with President Clinton’s
support, doubled the number of Border Patrol agents along the Southwest border by 1999 while
rejecting efforts to increase the number of agents and resources along the northern border. The
commission demonstrated these differences in priorities by stating that in 1999, there was one
Border Patrol agent for every quarter mile of the Southwest border compared to one agent for
every 13 miles of the northern border. The 9/11 Report pointed out that this lack of balance in
manpower between the patrolling of the borders was due to Congress and the INS’ focus on
unauthorized immigration as opposed to potential terrorist threats. According to the commission,
securing the northern border was not a priority despite evidence that terrorists had entered the
United States from Canada, awareness that terrorist activity existed in Canada perhaps due to its
more lenient immigration laws, and the previously mentioned OIG report, which criticized the
Border Patrol for not having a coherent northern border strategy.63 The National Border Patrol
Strategy includes a strategic focus particular to the northern border, seemingly addressing some of
the OIG report’s concerns.

63 9/11 Commission Report, p. 81.
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As noted above, since 9/11, the number of agents deployed along the northern border has
increased from 340 in FY2001 to 2,069 in FY2010. This means that, as of FY2010, the Border
Patrol deployed roughly one agent for every 2 miles of the northern border, compared to eight
agents for every mile of the southwestern border. However, the increase in northern border
staffing over the past three years has fallen short of the mandate to deploy 20% of annual
increases in Border Patrol staffing to the northern border that was enacted by the Intelligence
Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act (IRTPA); only 12% of the overall increase in manpower
since FY2006 has been deployed to the northern border. A possible issue for Congress concerns
whether the increased numbers of Border Patrol agents and resources deployed along the northern
border adequately address the 9/11 Commission’s criticisms and are enough to effectively detect,
apprehend, and deter potential terrorists from entering the United States across this border.
Another potential issue could include what impact DHS’s failure to meet the statutory mandate
enacted by IRTPA has had on the security of the northern border.
Migrant Deaths
Migrant deaths along the border are an issue that gained national prominence when 19 migrant
workers were found dead in an airless truck trailer in Texas in May 200364 and 11 migrant
workers were discovered dead in a railway car in Iowa in October 2002.65 Unfortunately, the
accurate collection of data concerning unauthorized migrant deaths at the border has remained
challenging due to the large number of different federal, state, and local jurisdictions involved.
Additionally, most data available do not include information from the Mexican side of the border
and therefore most likely undercount the number of fatalities. The Border Patrol did not begin
formally collecting information on migrant deaths until 1998. Prior to 1998, the best data
available originated from the University of Houston’s Center for Immigration Research (CIR).
CIR compiled data on unauthorized migrant deaths along the Southwest border from local
medical investigators’ and examiners’ offices in California, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas
between 1985 and 1998.
CIR data (Figure 8) show that deaths decreased steadily from a high of 344 in 1988 to a low of
171 in 1994. With the advent of the “Prevention Through Deterrence” strategy in 1995 and the
rerouting of unauthorized immigration to the harsh conditions of the Arizona border, migrant
deaths appeared to have increased in the late 1990s, with Border Patrol data (Figure 9) showing a
then-high of 383 in 2000. Although migrant deaths decreased to 330 from 2000 to 2004, the 11%
reduction in deaths during this period is actually markedly less than the 44% decline in
apprehensions over the same period. During this period, the overall mortality rate (or, the number
of deaths per attempted border crossing) seems to have increased despite the overall reduction in
deaths. In FY2005, deaths increased by 43% from FY2004 to 472. Over the past four years,
migrant deaths have declined to 423 in FY2009, but still remain above the historical averages.

64 Juan A. Lozano, “Migrant Toll Hits 19 in Texas Case; 2nd Truck Found,” The Associated Press, May 17, 2003.
65 Amy Lorentzen, “Eleven Found in Rail Car Among Thousands of Trespassers Causing Security Concerns,” The
Associated Press
, October 16, 2002.
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Figure 8. Migrant Deaths, Center for Immigration Research Data
600
500
400
s
h
at
e
t D
300
an
igr
M
200
100
0
1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998
Year

Source: CRS Presentation of CIR and CBP Data.
Figure 9. Migrant Deaths, Border Patrol Data
600
500
400
s
h
at
e
t D
300
an
igr
M
200
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0
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
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2006
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2008
2009
Fiscal Year

Source: CRS Presentation of CIR and CBP Data.
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This evidence suggests that border crossings have become more hazardous since the “Prevention
through Deterrence” policy went into effect in 1995, resulting in an increase in illegal migrant
deaths along the Southwest border. The Border Patrol has drawn criticism from human rights
activists who claim that the agency’s migrant death count understates the number of fatalities.
Some contend that the Border Patrol undercounts fatalities by excluding skeletal remains, victims
in car accidents, and corpses discovered by other agencies or local law enforcement officers.66
Others point to inconsistencies in how the agency counts migrant deaths, with some sectors
counting smugglers and guides who perish, but others excluding them, even though official
Border Patrol policy is to include all deaths in the 43 counties within 100 miles of the U.S.-
Mexico border.67 Border Patrol officials counter that local law enforcement agencies often do not
inform the Border Patrol when they encounter dead migrants, and that deaths that occur outside
the 100-mile belt or on the Mexican side of the border are outside their operational purview.68
The ratio between migrant deaths and apprehensions shows how many unauthorized immigrant
fatalities there are for every apprehension made by a Border Patrol agent along the Southwest
border. Because apprehensions are, within their previously discussed limitations, the best statistic
available for measuring the trends in the number of people attempting to enter the country
illegally, this ratio sheds some light on the overall mortality rate at the border. Figure 10 shows
that the mortality rate per apprehension has been increasingly steadily (with the one-year
exception of FY2004), from 1.6 deaths per 10,000 apprehensions in FY1999 to 7.6 deaths per
10,000 apprehensions in FY2009. This suggests that, even as apparently fewer individuals have
been entering the country illegally over the past few years, the border crossing has become
increasingly dangerous for those that do attempt to cross into the United States illegally.

66 For example, see http://www.stopgatekeeper.org/English/bonner-040604.htm.
67 For example, see http://www.uh.edu/cir/Deaths_during_migration.pdf.
68 Andrea Almond, “How Best to Count Border Deaths?” The Associated Press, November 7, 2004.
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Figure 10. Migrant Mortality Rate, per 10,000 Apprehensions
8
7
sions
n

6
ehe
ppr 5
,000 A
0
4
1
3
hs per
eat 2
D
ant
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igr
M

0
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
Fiscal Year

Source: CRS Analysis of CBP Data.
The Border Patrol has taken several steps to address this problem in recent years, including the
previously discussed Border Safety Initiative and the specialized BORSTAR search and rescue
teams. In order to continue addressing this issue, the Border Patrol announced in May 2003 that it
would add 150 agents to line-duty in the Tucson sector, place 20 rescue beacons in the desert, and
enhance cooperation with Mexican border authorities.69 A potential oversight issue for Congress
includes whether the steps taken by the Border Patrol are an adequate response to the problem of
migrant deaths and injuries along the border, given the data presented above showing the border
crossing may be increasing in danger for unauthorized migrants.
Attacks on Border Patrol Agents
The Border Patrol only recently began collecting data on the attacks endured by agents in the line
of duty. These data include a number of different types of attacks, including personal attacks, rock
throwing, and shooting incidents. It is important to note that, while rock throwing incidents (or
rockings) may not appear to be as serious as shootings, they are nevertheless dangerous to agents.
Figure 11 shows that, since the Border Patrol began collecting data, there has been a marked
increase in the number of incidents, from 773 in FY2005 to 1,073 in FY2009. This increase in
violence against agents may be related to the increasing enforcement at the border. As increasing
numbers of Border Patrol agents are assigned to the Southwest border, there are more targets for
unauthorized migrants and for smugglers to attack. Additionally, the Prevention Through

69 U.S. Department of State, “U.S. Campaign on Mexican border Aims to Prevent Migrant Deaths,” press release, June
4, 2003.
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Deterrence strategy, with its focus on placing agents and Border Patrol resources directly on the
border, may increase these kinds of attacks by providing more visible targets.
Figure 11. Attacks on Border Patrol Agents
1,200
1,097
1,073
987
1,000
ts
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773
e
800
752
g
A
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B

600
US
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k
c

400
ta
At

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0
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
Fiscal Year

Source: CRS Presentation of CBP Data.
A potential oversight issue for Congress could include whether Border Patrol agents have
sufficient protection from these kinds of attacks, including whether the gear they are assigned is
adequate or whether additional safety equipment is required. Another oversight issue could
include whether the Border Patrol has sufficient contingency plans in place to evacuate agents
who are wounded in the line of duty. Lastly, Congress may be interested in studying whether
these attacks are linked in any way to smuggling organizations and, if so, what can be done to
interdict these groups before they attack agents.
Interior Enforcement70
The Border Patrol’s authority to conduct sweeps for unauthorized aliens in the interior of the
country has in recent years come under scrutiny.71 In June of 2004, Border Patrol agents from the
Temecula unit arrested over 300 immigrants in the Ontario, Corona, and Escondido areas of

70 For a more detailed discussion of the legal framework for Border Patrol inland enforcement, please refer to CRS
Report RL32399, Border Security: Inspections Practices, Policies, and Issues, by Ruth Ellen Wasem et al..
71 The Border Patrol’s statutory authority for border enforcement powers are stipulated in Title 8 of the U.S. Code [8
U.S.C. §1357 (a)] and section 287 of the Immigration and Nationalization Act (P.L. 82-414) . Additionally, their
enforcement authority is federal regulations (8 C.F.R. §287.5).
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California. DHS Under Secretary for Border and Transportation Security Asa Hutchinson noted
that these particular sweeps violated DHS policy because they were not authorized in
Washington, DC, but that the sweeps in general were legal and may be repeated in the future.72
The U.S. Code states that immigration officers, as designated by federal regulations, are entitled
to board and search all vessels “within a reasonable distance” of the border, and to have access to
private land, but not buildings, within 25 miles of the border.73 Federal regulations confer these
powers on Border Patrol agents and define reasonable distance from the border as 100 air miles,
but also allow Border Patrol district directors the ability to petition the Commissioner in special
circumstances to extend reasonable distance.74 Additionally, federal regulations state that Border
Patrol agents have the right to interrogate suspected illegal aliens anywhere inside or outside the
United States.75
On November 16, 2004, ICE and CBP signed a memorandum of understanding which delineates
the interior enforcement duties of the Border Patrol and ICE and aims to strengthen the
communication between the two agencies. The Border Patrol National Strategy notes that Border
Patrol agents will be deployed to interior locations “where there is a direct nexus to border control
operations, such as transportation hubs, airports, and bus stations to confront routes of egress for
terrorists, smugglers, and illegal aliens.”76 A possible issue for Congress is whether the Border
Patrol should have a role in interior enforcement, and if so, how far that role should extend. Some
might argue that Border Patrol resources would be more effectively deployed solely along the
border, and that Border Patrol interior enforcement efforts duplicate the efforts of other agencies
such as ICE. Others might note that the Border Patrol is uniquely situated to provide an interior
enforcement function because it has intimate knowledge of illegal immigration activity and
trends, and that it can deploy uniformed law enforcement officers much more rapidly than other
agencies.
Integration of IDENT/IAFIS Law Enforcement Databases
The CBP, and the INS and Department of Justice before it, has been repeatedly criticized by the
Office of the Inspector General (OIG) for problems with its implementation of the IDENT system
and for its lack of compatibility with the FBI’s IAFIS system. IAFIS is an automated 10-rolled
fingerprint matching system linked to a database that holds over 40 million records, including
wanted persons, stolen vehicles, deported felons, gang members, and terrorists.77 Integration of
the two systems is widely regarded as a vital component of tightening border security, as it would
allow CBP inspectors and Border Patrol agents to access the FBI’s criminal database in order to
establish whether apprehended aliens have outstanding warrants or criminal histories. However,
integration has proved difficult for various technical and organizational reasons.

72 Claire Vitucci, “Immigrant Sweep Was Not Ok’d // But a Top Official Says the Practice Is Legal, Could Be Used
Inland Again,” The Press-Enterprise, June 26, 2004.
73 8 USCS §1357 (a)(3).
74 8 CFR 287.1 (a)(1-3).
75 8 CFR 287.5 (a)(1-2).
76 U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Bureau of Customs and Border Protection, “National Border Patrol
Strategy,” March 2005, p.13.
77 U.S. Department of Justice, Office of the Inspector General, The Rafael Resendez-Ramirez Case: A Review of the
INS’s Actions and the Operation of Its IDENT Automated Fingerprint Identification System
, USDOJ/OIG Special
Report, March 2000, Appendix B.
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The most pressing technical issue, according to an OIG report,78 was related to the lower quality
of fingerprint images in the IDENT system, with 20% to 30% of IDENT fingerprints being
unacceptable in late 2003. Other technical issues identified by the OIG report relate to the US-
VISIT program,79 whose development has siphoned off some of the DHS staff working on the
IDENT/IAFIS integration project. Additionally, the implementation of the US-VISIT program
required some changes to the IDENT system which further delayed the integration project.
Organizationally, the two main issues with the integration project identified by the OIG report
were undefined project leadership and funding concerns. On the project leadership side, while
both DOJ and DHS have assigned lead responsibility for the project to specific offices, there
remain concerns about how the two departments coordinate their efforts. As of January 2004 no
memorandum of understanding had been released to clarify departmental roles. No subsequent
OIG reports on IDENT/IAFIS integration have been released. In terms of funding, in FY2005 the
President’s budget request includes $21.5 million for the integration project. The FY2005 DHS
House and Senate Appropriations Committee reports both supported the IDENT/IAFIS
integration project.80 In recent years, as well as in the FY2011 budget request, the IDENT/IAFIS
integration project has been funded through appropriations to the US-VISIT program.
OIG did note that some progress has been made in the integration of the IDENT and IAFIS
systems, with integrated workstations being deployed to about 12% of all ports of entry and 20%
of Border Patrol stations. However, the 2005 House Appropriations report expressed extreme
concern at the slow pace of integration, noting that DHS officials had testified that
interoperability would be achieved by the end of calendar year 2004 but that this no longer
seemed to be the case.81 CBP recently announced that it has deployed integrated IDENT/IAFIS
workstations to every Border Patrol station, seemingly addressing congressional concerns about
the slow pace of the integration project. However, while the integrated IDENT/IAFIS
workstations allow Border Patrol agents to check the FBI’s biometric criminal database, they do
not allow agents to access the name-based consolidated terrorist watchlist maintained by the TSC.
As previously mentioned, a possible issues for Congress to consider may be whether the Border
Patrol’s lack of access to name-based terrorist watchlists at their stations presents a weakness in
our nation’s border security. P.L. 108-458 called for the integration of all databases that process or
contain data on aliens maintained by DHS, DOJ’s Executive Office for Immigration Review, and
the State Department’s Bureau of Consular Affairs.82

78 For an expanded discussion of the history of IDENT, IAFIS, and the problems with their integration, please refer to
U.S. Department of Justice, Office of the Inspector General Special Report, IDENT/IAFIS: The Batres Case and the
Status of the Integration Project
, March 2004.
79 For a more detailed discussion of the US-VISIT program, please refer to CRS Report RL32234, U.S. Visitor and
Immigrant Status Indicator Technology (US-VISIT) Program
, by Lisa M. Seghetti and Stephen R. Vina.
80 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Appropriations, Department of Homeland Security Appropriations Bill, 2005,
report to accompany S. 2537, 108th Cong., 2nd sess., S.Rept. 108-280 (Washington, GPO, 2004), p. 15; and U.S.
Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, Department of Homeland Security Appropriations Bill, 2005, report to
accompany H.R. 4567, 108th Cong., 2nd sess., H.Rept. 108-541 (Washington, GPO, 2004), pp. 18-19.
81 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, Department of Homeland Security Appropriations Bill, 2005,
report to accompany H.R. 4567, 108th Cong., 2nd sess., H.Rept. 108-541 (Washington, GPO, 2004), pp. 18-19.
82 P.L. 108-458, sec.7208(e).
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Deployment of SBInet Technology
The SBInet Technology program has not met Congress’s expectations, as noted by the
appropriations committees, over the past two years. According to GAO analysis of the initial
SBInet expenditure plan submitted to Congress, DHS initially believed that a comprehensive
SBInet solution would be deployed to the entire Southwest border by 2011, and that some basic
functionalities would be deployed by the end of 2008. However, in its most recent report, GAO
noted that in 2009 DHS believed that some limited functionalities—that have yet to be
determined—would be deployed to one-third of the Southwest border by 2011.83 Essentially,
SBInet has turned out to be more difficult to implement than DHS originally thought. Most
recently, rather than extending a comprehensive “virtual fence” across the entire Southwest
border by the end of 2008, as SBInet was originally envisioned to do, the program will instead
provide limited pilot capabilities one Southwest border sectors sometime in FY2010. In early
2010, Secretary Napolitano ordered a department-wide assessment of the SBInet technology
project, but stated that she would continue to support the deployment of border supervision and
protection technologies.84
The new deployment schedule for SBInet represents a significant downgrading of the program’s
goals, as noted by GAO. Not only will the program be implemented years behind its original
schedule, it is no longer clear exactly what functionalities the program will deliver. These factors
may be of concern to Congress as it oversees the program’s development and considers whether
to continue to fund the program moving forward.
Coordination with Other Federal Agencies
A GAO report criticized the Border Patrol for failing to coordinate its activities with the federal
land management agencies operating along the border. The federal land management agencies
with some role at or near the border listed in the GAO report are the Bureau of Land
Management, the Fish and Wildlife Service, the National Park Service, the Bureau of Indian
Affairs, and the Forest Service. While the GAO found that some coordination existed at the field
level, as of May 2004 neither the Border Patrol nor DHS had issued any national level plans
detailing how interagency coordination would occur. The report points out that while the agencies
have “separate and distinct” missions along the border, when confronted with illegal activities
both the land management agency law enforcement officers and Border Patrol agents must
enforce federal laws and regulations and have the legal authority to bear arms, interdict criminals,
and make arrests.
The GAO report found that the level of border related criminal activity reported by the land
management agencies, including drug smuggling and unauthorized alien crossings, had increased
significantly since the late 1990s. The report notes that the Department of the Interior saw
unauthorized alien apprehensions on its lands within 100 miles of the Arizona-Mexico border
increase dramatically, from 512 in 1997 to 113,480 in 2000, and that officials reported that the
number of unauthorized aliens crossing through its lands continues to rise. The GAO notes that
this increase in illegal activity adversely affects not just the agencies’ law enforcement officers,

83 GAO SBInet Report, p. 3.
84 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, The Homeland Security
Department’s Budget Submission for Fiscal Year 2011
, 111th Cong., 1st sess., February 24, 2010.
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but also the civilians who visit the various parks along the borders, endangered species, and the
land itself.85 A possible oversight issue for Congress concerns whether the lack of national level
interagency coordination along the border poses a potential threat to border security. If so,
Congress might consider whether increased interagency coordination would increase bureaucracy
and reduce the efficiency of the Border Patrol’s activities along the border, or whether increased
coordination would increase efficiency by better allocating and deploying resources.
Civilian Humanitarian Groups
Other border organizations, such as Humane Borders, Samaritan Patrol, and the Border Action
Network, provide humanitarian relief such as drinking water and medical supplies to
unauthorized aliens. This summer, a network of faith-based organizations (including Samaritan
Patrol) has begun a campaign called “No More Deaths,” which seeks to reduce the number of
migrant deaths along the border by running two 24-hour camps in southern Arizona where
migrants can receive food, water, and access to medical attention.86 These kinds of activities
concern those who believe that the humanitarian aid, no matter how well intentioned, assists
unauthorized immigrants in their efforts to subvert immigration laws and enter the country.
Others believe that the number of migrant deaths along the border is unacceptably high, and that
these organizations are saving lives through their humanitarian aid.
A possible oversight issue for Congress concerns whether some of the activities of these
humanitarian groups present an obstacle to the Border Patrol as it carries out its enforcement of
immigrations laws along the border. If so, Congress may decide what, if anything, can be done to
curtail those specific activities by civilian border groups that negatively impact the Border Patrol.
Staffing and Training Issues
Border Patrol agent manpower has been increasing steadily since the adoption of the “Prevention
Through Deterrence” strategy, which focused on placing increased amounts of agents and
resources directly on the Southwest border. Figure 12 demonstrates the increasing manpower
available to the Border Patrol, with agent staffing levels almost tripling between 1990 and 2002.
This rapid increase in agents allowed the Border Patrol to place more agents directly on the
border, but also resulted in a dilution of the level of experience of the agents in the field. A
General Accounting Office (GAO) report in 1999 noted that the average experience level of
Border Patrol agents had declined agency-wide, and that the percentage of agents with less than
two years of experience had almost tripled, from 14% to 39%, between 1994 and 1998.87 The
GAO report goes on to observe that attrition rates were rising and that this was making it difficult
for the Border Patrol to meet its hiring objectives.
Given the rapid expansion of Border Patrol manpower over the past few years, which has seen the
Border Patrol increase by 100% since 2002, GAO’s analysis of Border Patrol training may remain
cogent today. P.L. 108-458, the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004

85 U.S. General Accounting Office, Border Security: Agencies Need to Better Coordinate Their Strategies and
Operations on Federal Lands
, GAO-04-590, June 2004.
86 Luke Turf, “No More Deaths Vows to Keep Helping Crossers,” Tucson Citizen, July 27, 2004, p. 5A.
87 U.S. General Accounting Office, Border Patrol Hiring: Despite Recent Initiatives, Fiscal Year 1999 Hiring Goal
Was Not Met
, GAO/GGD-00-39, December 1999, p. 2.
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Border Security: The Role of the U.S. Border Patrol

(IRTPA), included a provision that would increase the number of Border Patrol agents by 2,000
annually from FY2006 to FY2010.88 Since IRTPA’s enactment, Congress has appropriated large
increases for the Border Patrol. These increases have allowed DHS to hire an additional 8,855
agents from FY2006 through FY2010, which is just short of the 9,300 additional agents
authorized by IRTPA and other acts over this period. The FY2011 Budget Request, however,
includes a requested reduction of 181 Border Patrol agents.89
Figure 12. Overall Border Patrol Agent and Pilot Manpower
25,000
20,000
ts 15,000
n
e

BP Ag 10,000
US
5,000
0
1992
1994
1996
1998
2000
2002
2004
2006
2008
Fiscal Year

Source: CRS Presentation of CBP Data.
A possible oversight issue for Congress concerns whether the rapid expansion of manpower has
overly diluted the overall experience of the Border Patrol workforce. Another oversight issue
could include whether the growth in manpower has been matched with enhanced training and
other procedures to integrate new staff more efficiently and effectively into the workforce. Policy
options could include requiring the Border Patrol to certify that its agents receive enhanced
training, or providing incentives for senior agents to remain in the field.
Agent Attrition
It is not clear whether Border Patrol agent attrition continues to be a problem in the Border Patrol
today. During Senate testimony in July 2003, CBP Director Robert Bonner acknowledged that the
Border Patrol was facing a serious problem with agents leaving the force to pursue other

88 P.L. 108-458, sec. 5202.
89 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, The Homeland Security
Department’s Budget Submission for Fiscal Year 2011
, 111th Cong., 1st sess., February 24, 2010.
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Border Security: The Role of the U.S. Border Patrol

opportunities. He noted that “attrition rates for these positions are reaching crisis proportions.”90
As Figure 13 shows, 1995 also marks the beginning of an upward trend in the rate of agent
attrition within the Border Patrol, with the average attrition rate doubling from around 5% in the
period between 1990 and 1994, to slightly above 10% from 1995 to 2001. In 2002, Border Patrol
attrition spiked to 18%, an increase that has generally been attributed to agents leaving the Border
Patrol to join the newly formed Transportation Security Agency.91 This made it difficult for the
Border Patrol to add agents to its overall workforce in recent years because most of their new
hires ended up replacing agents who had left the workforce. Since that peak, the attrition rate
declined to 4% in FY2005, before increasing again to around 10% in FY2007-FY2009.
The high rates of attrition from 2000 to 2003 made it difficult for the Border Patrol to meet its
staffing goals during that period. According to Bonner’s testimony in 2003, “there are four major
reasons that employees are abandoning careers in federal law enforcement: lack of job
satisfaction, low pay compared to that other law enforcement officers performing similar tasks,
lack of upward and lateral mobility, and poor working conditions.”92 After declining from
FY2004 to FY2006, the Border Patrol’s attrition rate has risen to 10% (in line with its recent
historical average) in FY2007 through FY2009. A potential oversight issue for Congress could
include whether DHS is doing enough to promote the retention of existing agents. Policy options
could include providing incentives to promote the hiring and the retention of Border Patrol
agents, providing additional promotional opportunities for agents within the Border Patrol, and
improving working conditions to the extent that this is feasible in the challenging border
environment.

90 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Appropriations, Subcommittee on Homeland Appropriations, prepared
statement by Bureau of Customs and Border Protection Director Robert Bonner, 108th Cong., 1st sess., May 13, 2003.
91 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, Subcommittee on Homeland Security, prepared statement by
Bureau of Customs and Border Protection Director Robert Bonner, 108th Cong., 1st sess., May 7, 2003.
92 U.S. Congress, House Government Reform Committee, Subcommittee on Civil Service and Agency Organization,
Hearing on Federal Law Enforcement Personnel in Post-September 11 Era, 108th Cong., 1st sess., July 23, 2003.
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Border Security: The Role of the U.S. Border Patrol

Figure 13. Border Patrol Agent Attrition Rate
20%
%
0
18.

18%
16%
%
.0

14%
0%
13
0%
12.
0%
te 12%
%
%
6%
%
a
11.
.0
11.
.0
1
8%
10.
10
10
10.
10%
0%
9.
9.
0%
%
%
8.
trrition R
8%
0
0
A
7.
7.
7%
0%
0%
6.
6.
6.
6%
0%
0%
5.
5.
0%
4.

4%
2%
0%
1990
1992
1994
1996
1998
2000
2002
2004
2006
2008
Fiscal Year

Source: CRS Presentation of CBP Data.

Author Contact Information

Chad C. Haddal

Specialist in Immigration Policy
chaddal@crs.loc.gov, 7-3701


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