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A small Texan border town is in the midst of a crime wave, the mayor said on Thursday, after 11,500 migrants flocked to his town in the last 10 days, wading across the Rio Grande from Mexico.
Eagle Pass, home to 29,000 permanent residents, is struggling to cope with the sudden influx. A further 4,000 to 9,000 are expected to arrive over the next few days said Rolando Salinas, the mayor.
Salinas, who on Tuesday night declared a state of emergency, said they were overwhelmed.
‘There have to be consequences for crossing illegally,’ he told The New York Post.
Salinas, a lifelong resident of his town, said it was unprecedented.
‘I’ve never seen people cross like this.
‘If they’re going to come, they must enter through the port of entry. I know people are desperate, but this is a nation of laws.
‘Our cops are overwhelmed. Our firefighters are responding to calls for care for migrants. We don’t have the resources to handle this.
‘We’ve seen robberies, they’ve broken into homes.’

A baby is pictured being passed under the razor wire on Thursday near Eagle Pass

A migrant is dragged beneath wire fencing in Eagle Pass, Texas, on ThursdayÂ

A man is pulled under the razor wire in Eagle Pass, Texas, on Thursday

An aerial view shows desperate migrant families breaking through wire to enter the USÂ

Migrants are seen holding hands to wade across the Rio Grande on Thursday and arrive in Eagle Pass

Rolando Salinas, the mayor of Eagle Pass, said there had been a spike in crime accompanying the surge in migrant arrivals

Many of the migrants flooding into Eagle Pass this week are from Venezuela. Others have come from Mexico, Honduras and other Central and South American countriesÂ

Migrants walk in a line on Thursday towards Eagle Pass, Texas

Officials talk to migrants at Shelby Park in Eagle Pass, Texas

A Border Patrol agent hands out paperwork to migrants under the bridge in Eagle Pass

A Texas Department of Safety officer (front) walks with migrants near the Rio Grande in Eagle Pass on Thursday

Border Patrol agents are seen on Thursday processing the new arrivals in Eagle Pass

Migrants sit in a makeshift processing center in Eagle Pass, Texas on Thursday
The mayor was asked by CNN’s Erin Burnett whether he thought President Joe Biden was to blame for the crisis in his town.
‘I’ll be honest with you – I believe 100 percent he does bear some responsibility for this crisis,’ he said.
‘I haven’t heard from anybody in the administration. The president hasn’t put out a statement, the vice president. I haven’t heard from anybody.
‘Nobody has bothered to call me or the city staff and say hey, this is the federal government, we know what you’re going through, we’re worried about you, this is our plan of action. Nothing.
‘We’re here abandoned. We’re on the border. We’re asking for help. This is unacceptable.’
He said the United States was ‘a nation of laws’.
Salinas asked that those wanting to come to the country should respect the laws, saying it was unfair on those who did.
On Wednesday night, Biden sent an additional 800 active-duty troops to the border, to work alongside 2,500 members of the National Guard who are already there.
A game of cat and mouse was playing out on Thursday along the banks of the Rio Grande.
Greg Abbott, the governor of Texas, on Wednesday tweeted that he had sent members of the Texas National Guard to reinstall razor wire along the river bank, after it had been removed.
On Thursday, a NewsNation reporter tweeted footage of migrants sitting on the banks of the Rio Grande, unable to scramble up the embankment to the U.S. side.
A thick roll of razor wire blocked their passage.
‘We are refusing to let them in and sending them back,’ he wrote on X.


CNN’s Ed Lavandera was live on air as migrants crawled under the razor wire on Thursday

Lavendera points to the group of people helping other migrants crawl under the wire

Members of the Texas National Guard on Thursday fixed the fence – but the migrants crawled under

The Texas National Guard are seen laying the razor wire on Thursday

Migrants are seen looking at the razor wire in Eagle Pass, Texas

Migrants are seen wading through the Rio Grande on Thursday near Eagle Pass

A woman climbs up the riverbank, with razor wire blocking her entrance

Border agents pull the body of a middle aged man from the Rio Grande on Thursday. He is the second person to drown in 24 hours in the border townÂ

According to local reports, most of the asylum seekers are Venezuelans who say were force to flee the economic and social collapse of the South American nation

A woman cries as she seeks help crossing concertina wire on Thursday in Eagle Pass

Among the 10,000 migrants who have crossed illegally into the US in the last 24 hours is this unaccompanied five-year-old girl, who has her mother’s name and phone number written on her t-shirt. She was among a group of 90 men, according to CBS’s Sydney Hernandez

A pregnant mother walks with her young son into Eagle Pass, Texas, on Thursday

Migrants who crossed into the U.S. from Mexico wait to be processed by U.S. Border Patrol agents on Thursday

Migrants wait to be processed in Eagle Pass on Thursday morning after overwhelming the small Texas border town yesterday

Border agents say criminal gangs are taking ‘full advantage’ of the escalating crisis by increasing their human trafficking efforts. Above, a group of 49 who were found in a ‘poorly ventilated trailer. They had come from Guatemala and Honduras
But just down the road, CNN reporter Ed Lavendera was speaking live on air when the migrants decided to take matters into their own hands and scramble under the wires.
Some lifted the wire, allowing their fellow migrants to crawl under.
Others behind them threw backpacks and duffel bags across the wire.
They were totally unfazed by the presence of a TV crew filming the entering illegally.
A Border Patrol agent soon appeared, and the group prepared to hand themselves in.
The reasons for the sudden surge in Eagle Pass are unknown.
Lavendera said that the ending of Title 42 in May stopped the crossings for several months: under the new rules which replaced Title 42, anyone found crossing illegally will be deported and blocked from entering for five years, with criminal prosecution if they are found.
But after a lull, the migrants waiting in Mexico to cross grew frustrated, and are now surging over.
On Thursday afternoon, migrants lined up to sign waivers to get a seat on one of the buses charted by Abbott to allow the migrants to travel to New York City.
More than 115,000 migrants have arrived in New York City in the past year.

Migrants sit under a bridge in Eagle Pass on Thursday awaiting processing

An Eagle Pass resident on Thursday plays golf while migrants look on


Migrants are seen in Tapachula, on the Mexico-Guatemala border, on Thursday

Migrants are seen on Thursday awaiting processing on the Mexican side of the border, in Ciudad Juarez – which borders El Paso, Texas

Lines of migrants await processing in Ciudad Juarez on Thursday. El Paso is on the other side

Rows and rows of migrants from Central and Southern America and around the world are seen on Thursday in Ciudad Juarez, waiting to cross into El Paso


Migrants are seen in El Carmen, southern Mexico, traveling towards the border on a train

The train is a common way for Central American migrants to reach the U.S.-Mexico border

Migrants wave from the top of the train near Paredon, in the southern Mexican state of Chiapas
Tom Schmerber, the sheriff of Maverick County, told CNN that the surge in crossings was extremely dangerous.
The body of a man believed to be a migrant was found in the waters around Eagle Pass on Thursday morning.
On Wednesday, a three-year-old boy died after being swept away as his family attempted to cross the Rio Grande near Eagle Pass.
‘It’s something very strange. Never thought I was going to see something like that in Eagle Pass,’ said Schmerber, an Eagle Pass native.
Schmerber, a Democrat, said the migrants caught crossing should be immediately sent back over the border, and said Biden was sending the message that the border is ‘going to be open.’
‘Some people are drowning. Some people are dying,’ Schmerber said.Â
‘Some of those ranchers are finding bodies or bones. So why take a risk? Why make those people come like this?’