Illegal entries into Arizona plummet, 60% fewer gotaways than in Biden years

Illegal entries into Arizona plummet, 60% fewer gotaways than in Biden years

Spread the love

In President Donald Trump’s first year in office, illegal border crossings in Arizona plummeted to record lows.

They represent roughly a 92% drop from illegal entries and a record number of gotaways reported in Arizona during the Biden administration.

Under the Trump administration, illegal entries in Arizona this year were 66% less than the total number of gotaways that Border Patrol agents reported in Arizona during the Biden years, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection data and gotaway data exclusively obtained by The Center Square.

In fiscal 2025, 65,813 illegal border crossers were apprehended in Arizona, excluding gotaways, according to CBP data. The fiscal year goes from Oct. 1 through Sept. 30.

By comparison, more than 775,000 illegal border crossers were reported in fiscal 2023, including nearly 577,000 reported by CBP and nearly 200,000 gotaways that Border Patrol agents reported and exclusively obtained by The Center Square at the time.

Fiscal 2025 apprehensions represent a fraction of those apprehended in previous years, including 564,215 in fiscal 2024, 576,901 in fiscal 2023 and 571,720 in fiscal 2022, according to CBP data.

These totals exclude gotaways, the official CBP term for those who illegally enter between ports of entry to evade capture, don’t file immigration claims and don’t return to Mexico. CBP doesn’t publicly report this data. The Center Square obtained gotaway data from Border Patrol agents, reporting it each month. At least two million gotaways were reported during the Biden administration nationwide, The Center Square exclusively reported.

Many gotaways are known to have criminal records. Some are on the terrorist watchlist and many have previously been deported, law enforcement officers told The Center Square.

Arizona and Texas CBP sectors were among the hardest hit during the Biden administration, each reporting unprecedented numbers.

Arizona’s 378 miles of shared border with Mexico are divided into two CBP sectors: Tucson and Yuma. Tucson Sector’s 262-border miles extend from the Yuma County line to the Arizona-New Mexico state line. Yuma Sector’s nearly 182,000 square miles of primarily desert terrain extends from Imperial Sand Dunes in California to the Yuma-Pima County line.

For the majority of 2022 and 2023, three of Yuma Sector’s interior checkpoints were down, Deputy Chief Border Patrol Agent Dustin Caudle told Congress, expressing concerns about gotaways, The Center Square reported. The checkpoints are critical for interdicting gotaways but because agents were pulled from the field to process illegal border crossers into the U.S., the checkpoints were closed, leaving the border wide open and unmanned, he said.

In 2023, the Tucson Sector reported the third-highest number of illegal entries along the southwest border, behind the top two sectors of El Paso and Del Rio in Texas. Border Patrol agents apprehended 373,625 people and reported at least 185,866 gotaways – nearly half as many as who were apprehended, or 49%, The Center Square reported.

Tucson Sector Border Patrol Chief John Modlin testified before Congress that the majority of gotaways were single military age men working for transnational criminal human and drug smuggling organizations, The Center Square reported.

Modlin described the tactics they used to pull agents from patrolling the border and interdicting illegal crossers, called “task saturation.” It refers to when “smuggling organizations split large groups of migrants into many smaller groups [and direct them] to illegally cross the border all at once at different locations, effectively saturating the area with migrants and exhausting our response capability.” This overwhelms Border Patrol agents’ response, enabling illicit contraband and criminal gotaways to move through another area of the border without getting caught, he explained.

By 2024, the situation in the Tucson Sector reported more apprehensions than other southwest border sectors, The Center Square reported.

That changed this year after Trump implemented a series of border security policies that resulted in record low illegal crossings at the southwest border, The Center Square reported.

Under Trump’s direction, Arizona Border Patrol agents are now in the field, assisted by the National Guard and Coast Guard members. They’re no longer releasing illegal border crossers into the interior but processing them for expedited removal. The Department of Homeland Security is expanding smart wall construction and the Department of War is expanding border barrier infrastructure in Arizona. DOW, DHS, CBP and Border Patrol recruitment also reached record highs this year, including in Arizona, The Center Square reported.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Will County Public Works Committee

Committee Approves $317K Guardrail Maintenance Contract Amid Discussion on Installation Dangers

Will County Public Works and Transportation Committee Meeting | March 3, 2026 Article Summary: Will County officials approved an annual guardrail maintenance contract Tuesday while addressing national concerns over improperly installed...
Will County Board Graphic.03

Will County Approves Diamond Enterprise Zone Expansion to Support $355 Million Energy Investment

Will County Executive Committee Meeting | March 12, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Executive Committee unanimously approved ordinances expanding the Diamond Enterprise Zone to include the Village of Braceville. The...
will county Committee-Legislative.Graphic

Federal Update: DHS Shutdown, War Powers, and Housing Legislation Dominate Washington

Legislative Committee Meeting | March 3, 2026 Article Summary: Will County's federal lobbyists briefed the Legislative Committee on a turbulent week in Washington, D.C., highlighting the passage of a major bipartisan...
Will County Finance Logo

Will County Corporate Revenues Surpass Expectations, Igniting Debate Over Delinquent Tax Sales

Will County Finance Committee Meeting | March 3, 2026 Article Summary: A routine review of the county’s year-end corporate fund revealed that revenues exceeded budgeted expectations by millions, largely driven by...
Will County Public Works Committee

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Will County Public Works and Transportation Committee for March 3, 2026

Will County Public Works and Transportation Committee Meeting | March 3, 2026 The Will County Public Works and Transportation Committee met on Tuesday, March 3, advancing millions of dollars in...
solar panels photovoltaics in solar farm

Will County Grants Extensions for Seven Solar and Commercial Projects Amid Permitting Delays

Will County Land Use & Development Committee Meeting | March 5, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Land Use and Development Committee approved a slate of extensions for seven previously authorized...
Screenshot 2026-03-14 at 2.12.52 PM

Monee Explores Federal and Regional Grants to Improve Village Walkability

Monee Village Board of Trustees Meeting | February 25, 2026 Article Summary: Monee officials recently met with the Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning to identify long-term funding sources for expanding...
Will County Board Graphic.03

Will County Committee Postpones Liquor, Ad-Hoc Committee: Gaming, and Tobacco Ordinance Updates Amid Extensive Revisions

Will County Board Ad-Hoc Ordinance Review Committee Meeting | March 10, 2026 Article Summary: A Will County Board committee paused the advancement of major updates to the county's liquor, video...
Monee Graphic.1

Monee Approves Over $950,000 in Contractor Payouts for Road and Sidewalk Projects

Monee Village Board of Trustees Meeting | February 25, 2026 Article Summary: The Monee Village Board approved major payouts for the ongoing Industrial Drive reconstruction and the 2025 sidewalk improvement...
solar panels photovoltaics in solar farm

Land Use Committee Approves 4.98-Megawatt Solar Facility on Eagle Lake Road Near Peotone

Will County Land Use & Development Committee Meeting | March 5, 2026 Article Summary: Reversing a deadlocked Planning and Zoning Commission, the Will County Land Use and Development Committee unanimously approved...
Will County Board Graphic.04

Will County Advances Nearly $1.5 Million in Right-of-Way and Improvement Agreements for Weber, Gougar, and Laraway Roads

Will County Public Works and Transportation Committee Meeting | March 3, 2026 Article Summary: The Public Works and Transportation Committee authorized a slate of professional services and construction agreements Tuesday to...
Screenshot 2026-03-14 at 2.12.52 PM

Monee Trustees Push to Rezone Commercial Properties to Alleviate Red Tape for Homeowners

Monee Village Board of Trustees Meeting | February 25, 2026 Article Summary: Trustee Heidi Gonzalez voiced frustration over the village's zoning map, arguing that residential homes stuck in commercial zones...
Will County Public Works Committee

Public Works Committee: Approves $1.59 Million Contract for Scheer Road Bridge Replacement in Green Garden Township

Will County Public Works and Transportation Committee Meeting | March 3, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Public Works and Transportation Committee on Tuesday advanced a nearly $1.6 million contract to...
will county Committee-Legislative.Graphic

Will County Board Backs $10 Million State Public Health Grant Increase Amid Funding Cuts

Legislative Committee Meeting | March 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Legislative Committee unanimously approved a resolution supporting a state legislative push to increase the Local Health Protection Grant by $10...
Monee Fire

Barn Fire on Whispering Hills Lane Claims Livestock, Draws Extensive Mutual Aid Response

Article Summary: A massive late-night structure fire completely destroyed a 60-by-60-foot wood frame barn on Whispering Hills Lane, resulting in the loss of 15 animals but no human injuries. Firefighters from...