Gov. Rick Perry, Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst and Speaker Joe
Straus today directed the Texas Dept. of Public Safety (DPS) to immediately
begin law enforcement surge operations on the Texas-Mexico border to combat the
flood of illegal immigration into the
state in the absence of adequate federal
resources to secure the border. State leaders have authorized DPS to fund
border security operations at approximately $1.3 million per week.
“Texas can’t afford to wait for Washington to act on this
crisis and we will not sit idly by while the safety and security of our
citizens are threatened,” Gov. Perry said. “Until the federal government
recognizes the danger it’s putting our citizens in by its inaction to secure
the border, Texas law enforcement must do everything they can to keep our
citizens and communities safe.”
In a joint letter to DPS Director Steve McCraw, state
leaders authorized DPS to conduct law enforcement surge operations using any
funds appropriated to the agency. DPS surge operations will continue at least
through the end of the calendar year. DPS must periodically report the results
of the law enforcement surge to the governor and the legislature.
“The federal government has abdicated its responsibility to
secure the border and protect this country from the consequences of illegal
immigration, but as Texans we know how to lead in areas where Washington has
failed,” Lt. Gov. Dewhurst said. “Last year DPS conducted Operation Strong
Safety and achieved astounding results. Crime rates related to drugs, cartels,
transnational gangs, and illegal border activity plummeted because of the
resources we allocated to stop illegal entry at the border. It’s time to make
this type of presence on the border permanent.”
The U.S. Customs and Border Patrol (USCBP) has apprehended
more illegal immigrants in the Rio Grande Valley in the first eight months of
the current federal fiscal year (over 160,000) than it did for all of fiscal
year 2013 (154,453). In May 2014 alone, USCBP reported apprehending more than
1,100 illegal immigrants per day in the Rio Grande Valley. This year, like last
year, more than half of the individuals apprehended at the Texas-Mexico border
by USCBP are from countries other than Mexico. Additionally, 34,000
unaccompanied alien children (UAC) have been apprehended in Texas so far this
year, with estimates that number will reach 90,000 by the end of the fiscal
year. By comparison, 28,352 UAC were apprehended in fiscal year 2013.
“In this current security and humanitarian crisis, the
federal government's failure to secure our border is resulting in serious
consequences for Texas,” Speaker Straus said. “To immediately address these
issues, today I join with Gov. Perry and Lt. Gov. Dewhurst to direct the Texas
Department of Public Safety to use the appropriate resources to keep our state
safe.”
Previous law enforcement surge operations in the border
region, such as Operation Strong Safety in 2013, have proven effective in
reducing criminal activity and violence associated with human smuggling and
drug trafficking in the border region.
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