Texas Has Placed at Least 10 Migrants in Jail After Crossing Illegally Into U.S.

Texas has placed at least 10 migrants in jail after crossing illegally into the U.S. from Mexico's border, the Associated Press reported.

More are expected to join those jailed as the state has started to arrest migrants on trespassing charges following a push by Republican Gov. Greg Abbott. The migrants are being held at a formerly vacated state prison in Dilley, Texas, located roughly 100 miles north of Laredo, said Texas Department of Criminal Justice spokesman Robert Hurst. Those arrested so far are all single adult men, according to Val Verde County Attorney David Martinez.

"If John Doe is caught on my property and he has his wife and his children with him, chances are he's not going to be arrested," said Martinez, who thinks migrant family units will not face arrests. "That's what's been represented to me."

Martinez was told migrant arrests could rise to 100 or 200 daily, and said that "would overwhelm not only my office but our entire system pretty quickly."

For more reporting from the Associated Press, see below.

Migrants in Texas
Texas has placed at least 10 migrants in jail after illegally crossing into the U.S. from Mexico. In this photo, migrants are pictured after crossing the US-Mexico border into the U.S. in Roma, Texas on July 8, 2021. Paul Ratje/AFP via Getty Images

The migrant arrests are part of Abbott's actions that he says are needed to slow the number of border crossings.

The arrests put in motion plans that Abbott first announced in June when he also said that Texas would continue building former President Donald Trump's border wall and called on other governors to deploy law enforcement and National Guard members to the southern border.

Hurst said the converted state prison facility will be able to hold more than 950 people.

Most land along the southern Texas border is private. Last week, U.S. officials reported that they had encountered 55,805 members of families with children in June, which was up 25 percent from the previous month. That figure still remains far below the high of 88,587 in May 2019.

A spokesman for the Texas Department of Public Safety did not immediately return a message Thursday.

Val Verde County, which has around 50,000 residents, has become the backdrop of Abbott's criticism of President Joe Biden over the border as the two-term governor, who is up for reelection in 2022, has sought to take Trump's mantle on immigration. He returned to the county last weekend along with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and other officials, including Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody, who tweeted this week that she had tested positive for COVID-19.

"The state jail commission has worked out a way to jail far more people that are currently being jailed," Abbott said during his visit on Saturday.

But the largest Texas counties along the southern border, where crossings are typically the highest, have rejected Abbott's offer to heighten enforcement and accept disaster declarations, which governors typically only grant during events like hurricanes or wildfire.

Migrants arrested by state troopers for trespassing first began showing up to the former prison on Tuesday. Prison officials said in a statement that preparations for the facility included temporary air conditioning—which many Texas prisons don't have in living areas—and training and licensing jailers.

Since first announcing earlier this summer that Texas would begin charging migrants with state crimes, Abbott has said law enforcement would not be involved in "catch and release" and said those arrested would spend time behind bars. But Martinez said he would handle the cases the same as usually does, which typically means offering time served.

"My office is working really hard to try to minimize the amount of time that they have to sit in that jail," he said.