U.S. border patrol reports record number of encounters with migrants at the Canadian border
CBC
U.S. Customs and Border Protection says it recorded a record-high number of encounters with migrants between border posts on the Canada-U.S. border between October 2023 and July of this year.
It's a pattern experts say could be a problem for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's government as the question of illegal immigration heats up in a close-fought U.S. election.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) records an "encounter" in its database when it comes across someone who is inadmissable to the U.S., or when border patrol officers find someone who has illegally crossed the border into the U.S. between border posts.
CBP reported encountering 19,498 migrants between border posts on the northern border between October 2023 and July 2024 — 15,612 of them in the Swanton Sector, which runs along the Quebec's border with New York and Vermont.
While the numbers still pale in comparison with the U.S southern border, that's more than twice as many as the 7,630 encountered between border posts during the same time period the previous year.
The year before that, CBP reported encountering only 2,238 migrants between border posts at the northern border.
U.S. news coverage of the surge in migration over its northern border intensified over the summer. In an interview with Fox News on Aug. 22, after complaining about illegal migration over the southern border, former president Donald Trump said the U.S. now had a problem on the northern border with migrants coming in from Canada.
Kelly Sundberg of Mount Royal University said the matter could become a political hot potato for the Trudeau government, regardless of who becomes the next president of the United States.
"I hate to admit it, but I think that Donald Trump is right on this, that there is a need to focus north," said Sundberg, who worked for many years as an enforcement officer with the Canada Border Services Agency.
"But it's not just the Trump campaign. The [Kamala Harris] campaign has indicated also that they have acknowledged that there's concerns on the northern border."
RCMP Sgt. Charles Poirier said "there isn't a day or night where there isn't a crossing." In Quebec alone, the RCMP intercepts an average of more than 100 people per week on the Canadian side of the border and Poirier said that's only a portion of those headed for the U.S.
U.S. news reports have documented a boom in taxis and cars ferrying migrants from small upstate New York border towns to New York City.
"Part of the problem is as the southern border has gotten tighter, the coyotes (smugglers) are telling people to come to Canada and then they try to smuggle them into the United States," said Washington State immigration lawyer Greg Boos.
Keith Cozine is an associate professor of homeland security at St. John's University in New York and a former officer with the Department of Homeland Security. He said the numbers at the northern border are cause for concern.

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