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Judge Blocks Texas Troopers From Stopping Migrant Transports

A uniformed Texas Department of Public Safety officer stands in front of a group of migrants, mostly men, and points off into the distance.
Eric Gay
/
Associated Press File
In this Wednesday, June 16, 2021 file photo, A Texas Department of Public Safety officer in Del Rio, Texas directs a group of migrants who crossed the border and turned themselves in. he Biden administration sued Texas on Friday, July 30, 2021 to prevent state troopers from stopping vehicles carrying migrants on grounds that they may spread COVID-19, warning that the practice would exacerbate problems amid high levels of crossings on the state's border with Mexico.

A federal judge Tuesday blocked Texas from allowing state troopers to stop vehicles carrying migrants on the grounds that they may spread COVID-19 as worries and new cases are rising along the U.S.-Mexico border.

The temporary order by U.S. District Judge Kathleen Cardone of El Paso is at least a short-term victory for the Biden administration, which had warned that Republican Gov. Greg Abbott鈥檚 plan would create more problems in Texas 鈥 particularly in the Rio Grande Valley, which one U.S. official called the 鈥渆picenter of the current surge.鈥

In a sign of the growing strain, local officials there who have rebuffed Abbott鈥檚 hardline immigration actions and declared a local state of disaster this week as COVID-19 cases climb and capacity at migrant shelters is stretched.

Cardone said Abbott鈥檚 directive would have the effect of 鈥渆xacerbating the spread of COVID-19.鈥 She scheduled another hearing for next week.

Abbott鈥檚 office did not immediately comment on the ruling.

Like Texas, the Biden administration is also raising concerns about the much more contagious Delta variant as large numbers of noncitizens continue arriving at Texas鈥 southern border. On Monday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention renewed emergency powers that allow federal authorities to expel families at the border on grounds it prevents the spread of the coronavirus.

But in suing Texas, the Justice Department accused Abbott of potentially worsening the spread of COVID-19, saying in court filings that impeding the transfer of migrants would prolong the detention of unaccompanied children in 鈥渋ncreasingly crowded鈥 facilities.

Hidalgo County Judge Richard Cortez, a Democrat who is the top elected official in the Rio Grande Valley鈥檚 largest county, said Tuesday that typically about 8% of migrants tested for COVID-19 were positive. He said that number is now at 16% 鈥 roughly in line with Texas鈥 overall positivity rate of 17%, according to state health figures.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not getting better. It鈥檚 getting worse,鈥 said Cortez, defending his local disaster order.

Critics have accused Abbott, who is up for a third term in 2022, of trying to deflect blame for Texas鈥 on migrants as he rejects calls to reinstate mask mandates and other pandemic restrictions. On Tuesday, Texas surpassed 7,000 hospitalized virus patients for the first time since February and reported more than 11,000 new cases.

Abbott last week had authorized Texas鈥 growing presence of state troopers along the border to 鈥渟top any vehicle upon reasonable suspicion鈥 that it transports migrants. Troopers could then reroute vehicles back to their point of origin or impound them. Civil rights groups and immigration advocates have expressed concerns that the directive to troopers could invite racial profiling.

Border crossings usually slow during stifling 鈥 and sometimes fatal 鈥 summer heat. But U.S. authorities revealed Monday that they likely picked up 19,000 unaccompanied children in July, exceeding the previous high of 18,877 in March. The June total was 15,253, according to David Shahoulian, assistant secretary for border and immigration policy at the Department of Homeland Security, who singled out the Rio Grande Valley for having the largest numbers.

Overall, U.S. authorities stopped migrants about 210,000 times at the border in July, up from 188,829 in June and the highest in more than 20 years. But the numbers aren鈥檛 directly comparable because many cross repeatedly under a pandemic-related ban known as Title 42, which is named for a 1944 public health law.

The CDC said Monday that the ban would remain until its director 鈥渄etermines that the danger of further introduction of COVID-19 into the United States from covered noncitizens has ceased to be a serious danger to the public health.鈥

Associated Press