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History Of The U.S. Border
Patrol
Mounted watchmen of the United States Immigration Service
patrolled the border in an effort to prevent illegal
crossings as early as 1904, but their efforts were irregular
and undertaken only when resources permitted. The
inspectors, usually called "mounted guards", operated out of
El Paso, Texas. Though they never totaled more than 75, they
patrolled as far west as California trying to restrict the
flow of illegal Chinese immigration.
In March
1915, Congress authorized a separate group of mounted
guards, often referred to as "mounted inspectors". Most rode
on horseback, but a few operated automobiles and boats.
Although these inspectors had broader arrest authority, they
still largely pursued Chinese immigrants trying to avoid the
National Origins Act and Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882.
These patrolmen were Immigrant Inspectors, assigned to
inspection stations, and could not watch the border at all
times. U.S. Army troops along the southwest border performed
intermittent border patrolling, but this was secondary to
"the more serious work of military training." Non-nationals
encountered illegally in the U.S. by the army were directed
to the immigration inspection stations. Texas Rangers were
also sporadically assigned to patrol duties by the state,
and their efforts were noted as "singularly effective".
The Border
Patrol was founded on May 28, 1924 as an agency of the
United States Department of Labor to prevent illegal entries
along the Mexico–United States border. Additional operations
were established along the Gulf Coast in 1927 to perform
crewman control to insure that non-American crewmen departed
on the same ship on which they arrived. Additional stations
were temporarily added along the Gulf Coast, Florida and the
Eastern Seaboard during the sixties when Cuba came under
dictatorial control and entertained ideas of establishing
USSR missile bases there.
Prior to 2003, the Border Patrol was part of the Immigration
and Naturalization Service (INS), an agency that was within
the U.S. Department of Justice. INS was disbanded in March
2003 when its operations were divided between CBP, United
States Citizenship and Immigration Services, and U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
The priority mission of the Border Patrol, as a result of
the 9/11 attacks and its merging into the Department of
Homeland Security (DHS) is to prevent terrorists and
terrorist weapons from entering the United States of
America. However, the Border Patrol's traditional mission
remains as the deterrence, detection and apprehension of
illegal immigrants and individuals involved in the illegal
drug trade who generally enter the United States other than
through designated ports of entry. The Border Patrol also
operates 33 permanent interior checkpoints along the
southern border of the United States.
Currently, the U.S. Border Patrol employs over 17,600 agents
(as of the end of fiscal year 2008), who are specifically
responsible for patrolling the 6,000 miles of Mexican and
Canadian international land borders and 2,000 miles of
coastal waters surrounding the Florida Peninsula and the
island of Puerto Rico. Agents are assigned primarily to the
Mexico–United States border, where they are assigned to
control drug trafficking and illegal immigration. Patrols on
horseback have made a comeback since smugglers have been
pushed into the more remote mountainous regions, which are
hard to cover with modern tracking strategies.