Executive Order 13767
Executive Order 13767, officially titled "Border Security and Immigration Enforcement Improvements," is an executive order issued by President Donald J. Trump on January 25, 2017, directing executive departments and agencies to employ all lawful resources to secure the southern border of the United States, prevent further illegal immigration, and repatriate removable aliens.[1][2] The order mandates the Secretary of Homeland Security to immediately plan, design, and construct a physical wall along the entire southern border, prioritizing areas of high illegal entry, and to end the practice of catch-and-release by detaining individuals pending removal proceedings.[1] It further requires expanding detention facilities, hiring 5,000 additional Border Patrol agents and 5,000 customs officers, and deploying additional National Guard resources to support border security operations.[1][2] Implementation of the order facilitated the construction of over 450 miles of border barriers, including new wall sections and replacements of outdated fencing, though funding disputes led to a partial government shutdown in late 2018.[3] The directive faced legal challenges and opposition from advocacy groups citing humanitarian concerns, but it marked a shift toward stricter enforcement that reduced illegal crossings during periods of heightened activity.[4]Historical Context and Issuance
Preceding Immigration Enforcement Issues
In the years leading up to 2017, the U.S. southwest border experienced persistent illegal entry attempts, with U.S. Border Patrol apprehensions totaling 447,731 in fiscal year (FY) 2010, declining to 340,252 in FY2011, then rising to 414,397 in FY2013 and peaking at 479,371 in FY2014 amid a surge driven by Central American migration.[5][6] Apprehensions remained elevated at 408,870 in FY2016, reflecting inadequate deterrence from enforcement policies that included "catch and release," under which recent border crossers—particularly families and unaccompanied minors—were often processed and released into the U.S. interior with notices to appear in immigration court, a practice confirmed by Obama administration officials in congressional testimony as prioritizing limited resources on higher-threat individuals while releasing others.[7] This approach, rooted in prosecutorial discretion memos emphasizing deferred action for low-priority cases, strained Border Patrol resources and incentivized further crossings by signaling low risk of removal.[8] A key manifestation of border vulnerabilities was the 2014-2015 unaccompanied alien children (UAC) crisis, during which U.S. Customs and Border Protection apprehended 68,541 UACs in FY2014—a nearly 80% increase from 38,759 in FY2013—primarily from Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador, overwhelming detention facilities and leading to rapid releases under the 2008 Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act's requirements for hearings within stringent timelines.[9] Estimates indicated that 75-80% of these minors fell victim to human smugglers or traffickers en route, with many coerced into debt bondage or exploitation upon arrival, underscoring how unsecured borders facilitated predatory networks preying on vulnerable populations.[10] The influx diverted Border Patrol agents from patrol duties to processing and transport, exacerbating operational gaps and contributing to "got-aways"—estimated undetected entries—that further eroded enforcement capacity. Drug trafficking capitalized on these lapses, with heroin seizures by CBP at southwest border ports of entry and between ports rising sharply from 2010 to 2016; for instance, the Drug Enforcement Administration reported corridor-specific increases, such as a 2016 spike in Laredo and Tucson sectors, as cartels exploited migrant flows to conceal narcotics shipments amid distracted agents.[11] Fentanyl seizures, though initially small (under 100 pounds in FY2015 when tracking began), signaled emerging synthetic opioid threats tied to the same Mexican cartel supply chains.[12] Economically, the presence of an estimated 11.5 million unlawful immigrants by 2013 imposed a net annual fiscal cost of $54.5 billion on U.S. taxpayers, per analyses drawing on Census and DHS data, encompassing expenditures on education for U.S.-born children of unlawfully present parents, emergency medical care, and welfare programs accessed indirectly through eligible household members, outpacing limited tax contributions from this population.[13] From a causal standpoint, these patterns demonstrated how insufficient physical and personnel barriers at the border enabled not only mass unauthorized entries but also ancillary threats like cartel dominance in smuggling routes and erosion of territorial control, as evidenced by recurrent surges overwhelming finite resources without corresponding interior enforcement to restore deterrence. Empirical incarceration data from Texas (2010-2016) showed undocumented immigrants had lower overall felony conviction rates than natives (e.g., 782 per 100,000 vs. 1,797), yet this masked border-enabled transnational crimes such as smuggling, where undetected entrants facilitated 90% of heroin entering via land routes.[11]Signing and Stated Objectives
President Donald Trump signed Executive Order 13767, titled "Border Security and Immigration Enforcement Improvements," on January 25, 2017, five days after his inauguration, as an initial measure to strengthen immigration enforcement.[1] The order directed executive departments and agencies, particularly the Department of Homeland Security, to employ all lawful resources to secure the southern border against unlawful entries that posed risks to national safety, including terrorism, drug trafficking, and criminal activity.[2] The stated objectives centered on attaining "complete operational control" of the border, defined as preventing all unlawful entries of terrorists, other aliens, narcotics, and contraband into the United States, in line with congressional intent under section 2 of the Secure Fence Act of 2006 (Public Law 109-367).[2] This control was to be achieved by deterring illegal immigration through immediate detention and swift repatriation of apprehended aliens, prioritizing threats such as criminals and national security risks over lesser violations, pursuant to authority in the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1101 et seq.) and related statutes.[2][14] The order explicitly rejected prior policies of lax enforcement, such as "catch and release," which had permitted many illegal entrants to remain in the country pending protracted proceedings, thereby undermining deterrence.[2] Implementation of these objectives yielded an initial deterrence effect, with U.S. Customs and Border Protection apprehensions along the southwest border falling from 408,870 in fiscal year 2016 to 303,916 in fiscal year 2017, reflecting reduced illegal crossing attempts amid the administration's signaled commitment to rigorous enforcement.[15] This decline contrasted with patterns under previous administrations, where inconsistent application of detention mandates and interior enforcement had correlated with sustained or rising illegal entries despite apprehensions data.[15]Detailed Provisions
Directives for Physical Border Barriers
The Executive Order 13767 mandated that the Secretary of Homeland Security immediately plan, design, and construct a physical wall along the southern border of the United States, utilizing materials and technology deemed most effective for attaining complete operational control and preventing unlawful entries.[1] This directive invoked existing statutes, including the Secure Fence Act of 2006 and Section 102 of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 (IIRIRA), which required physical barriers supplemented by access roads, lighting, cameras, and sensors to impede illegal crossings.[1] The order defined "wall" as a contiguous, physical wall or other equivalently secure, contiguous, and impassable physical barrier, with construction prioritized in high-traffic areas based on terrain analysis.[1] To ensure practicality, the Secretary was required to conduct a comprehensive study within 180 days assessing geophysical and topographical features, resource needs, and strategies for sustained border control, enabling wall placement where feasible while accounting for environmental impediments.[1] The design process incorporated evaluation of prototypes to identify features enhancing deterrence, such as resistance to climbing, tunneling, and vehicular penetration, as part of broader planning for effective barriers.[16] These provisions emphasized a layered defense approach, integrating the physical wall with supporting infrastructure like patrol roads and illumination to facilitate rapid apprehension and denial of entry, rather than isolated fencing.[1][17] The order directed identification and reallocation of federal funds for wall development, alongside projections for long-term appropriations, aligning with the President's campaign commitment to erect such barriers—with ultimate reimbursement anticipated from Mexico via diplomatic and trade negotiations—while prioritizing domestic resource deployment for initial execution.[1][18]Enhancements to Personnel and Technology
Executive Order 13767 directed the Secretary of Homeland Security, through the Commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), to hire 5,000 additional Border Patrol agents, subject to available appropriations, with the agents to enter duty and be assigned to duty stations as soon as practicable to enhance enforcement along the southern border.[2] This increase in personnel was intended to support the order's broader goal of achieving complete operational control, defined as the prevention of all unlawful entries, including by terrorists, other unlawful aliens, narcotics, and contraband, in line with statutory definitions under the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996.[2][19] The order further mandated the expansion of detention capacity by the Secretary to detain alien families together during removal proceedings and to end the practice of catch-and-release, thereby requiring additional resources for immigration personnel to manage increased detentions supporting border barrier enforcement.[2] Prioritization of personnel deployment focused on high-threat areas, with directives to immediately identify terrain for barrier construction based on illegal entry data, ensuring agents were positioned where empirical crossing metrics indicated the greatest vulnerabilities.[2] For technology, Section 4(a) instructed the Secretary to plan, design, and construct physical barriers using the most appropriate materials and technology to most effectively achieve complete operational control, implying integration of surveillance systems such as sensors and cameras to supplement barriers and monitor high-traffic zones.[2] This approach aligned with congressional intent under the Secure Fence Act of 2006, which emphasized layered enforcement including advanced technological barriers for detection and response in areas of high illegal activity.[20] The order's emphasis on data-driven prioritization extended to technology deployment, targeting sectors with the highest rates of unlawful crossings to maximize deterrence and apprehension efficiency.[2]Detention, Removal, and Interior Enforcement
Executive Order 13767 instructed the Secretary of Homeland Security to take all appropriate actions to detain aliens apprehended for violations of immigration law pending the outcome of their removal proceedings or their removal from the United States, to the extent permitted by law.[2] This directive explicitly aimed to terminate the "catch and release" policy, under which apprehended aliens, including families and asylum seekers, were previously released into the interior while awaiting hearings, a practice linked to high rates of absconding and recidivism as migrants exploited delays in the immigration system.[2][18] By mandating detention, the order sought to enforce statutory requirements under the Immigration and Nationality Act that prioritize custody for removable aliens, reducing opportunities for repeat illegal entries that prior release policies had incentivized through lax enforcement.[1] The order further directed enhancements to removal processes, including the expansion of expedited removal procedures to the maximum extent authorized by law, particularly for aliens apprehended near the border without valid entry documents or those making unmeritorious asylum claims.[2] Section 11 of the order required the Department of Homeland Security and the Attorney General to ensure that credible fear and asylum screenings aligned strictly with statutory definitions, preventing the abuse of parole or provisional waivers to delay removals.[1] This shift broadened enforcement from narrow priorities—such as focusing solely on criminal aliens under prior administrations—to include all removable aliens encountered in violation of immigration law, addressing systemic backlogs that had overwhelmed detention capacity and courts by prioritizing volume over selectivity.[21][18] Such measures were intended to deter frivolous claims and expedite repatriation, with causal evidence from enforcement data indicating that detention correlates with lower recidivism rates compared to release, as released aliens historically reoffended at rates exceeding 80 percent in some studies of prior policies.[22] For interior enforcement, the order authorized the expansion of the 287(g) program under section 287(g) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, enabling state and local law enforcement agencies, upon request and with necessary consent, to perform immigration enforcement functions in coordination with federal authorities.[2] This provision facilitated the identification and removal of removable aliens encountered during routine policing, countering non-cooperative sanctuary policies that had previously obstructed federal efforts by limiting information-sharing and detainer compliance.[1] By deputizing local officers to exercise immigration powers under federal supervision, the directive aimed to leverage existing law enforcement infrastructure for interior removals, enhancing overall deterrence against illegal presence without relying solely on federal resources strained by border priorities.[23] The approach recognized that fragmented enforcement, exacerbated by jurisdictions refusing to honor ICE detainers, had enabled removable aliens to evade consequences, thereby undermining the deterrent effect of immigration law.[24]Implementation and Execution
Initial Planning and Prototyping
Following the issuance of Executive Order 13767 on January 25, 2017, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), through U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), established a structured program to advance border barrier development, including the formation of initiatives focused on prototyping and system integration.[25] CBP initiated the Border Wall System Program to oversee design, testing, and evaluation of physical barriers, prioritizing secure, impassable structures as directed by the order.[2] This program emphasized integrating walls with technology and personnel enhancements for comprehensive border security. In March 2017, CBP issued two Requests for Proposals (RFPs) soliciting designs for concrete and see-through border wall prototypes, aiming to test multiple configurations for durability, anti-climb features, and environmental resilience.[26] By September 2017, DHS awarded contracts to six companies to construct eight prototypes—four solid concrete and four slatted steel designs—located in the San Diego Sector for accessibility and logistical efficiency.[27][28] These prototypes underwent initial engineering evaluations for structural integrity and breach resistance, with testing protocols developed in coordination with DHS Science and Technology Directorate to inform scalable designs without committing to full-scale production at that stage.[29] Concurrent with prototyping, DHS conducted preliminary environmental and engineering assessments to prioritize approximately 700 miles of high-traffic border segments for potential barrier placement, focusing on terrain analysis, smuggling patterns, and vulnerability mapping.[30] These assessments identified initial sites based on operational data from Border Patrol sectors, emphasizing rapid deployment options while preparing waivers under the order's authority for environmental laws to expedite planning.[2] DHS Secretary John Kelly issued implementing memoranda on February 20, 2017, directing inter-agency coordination among CBP, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and other components to align resources for barrier planning, including shared intelligence on border vulnerabilities and technology integration.[31] These memos established working groups to synchronize efforts across DHS entities and federal partners, ensuring prototyping and assessments supported unified enforcement priorities without overlapping jurisdictional redundancies.[18]Construction Milestones and Metrics
In 2017, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) constructed eight prototypes in San Diego, California, evaluating designs including solid concrete and steel bollard structures to assess constructability, durability, and effectiveness against breaches.[32] The prototypes, completed by October 2017 after initial delays due to bidding and environmental reviews, informed the selection of 30-foot steel bollard designs—hollow steel slats filled with concrete rebar and epoxy—for their superior resistance to tunneling, climbing, and vehicular ramming compared to solid concrete, while allowing visibility for Border Patrol agents.[28] [33] Construction accelerated following prototype testing, with initial miles deployed in high-traffic sectors like the Rio Grande Valley. By January 2018, replacement of older barriers began in Texas, prioritizing areas with no prior fencing or vehicle-only barriers. Milestones included 100 miles of new border wall system by January 2019, 200 miles by June 2019, 300 miles by August 2020, and approximately 400 miles by October 2020, with ongoing projects targeting 450 miles by year-end.[34] [35] By January 2021, the administration had installed 458 miles of primary and secondary barriers, predominantly replacing legacy structures (about 90%) but adding new segments—roughly 40-50 miles—in unwalled high-crossing zones such as the Rio Grande Valley and Yuma sectors, where terrain challenges like riverine floodplains and steep hillsides caused deployment delays of several months per project.[36] [37] Steel bollard systems proved adaptable to such varied topography, enabling rapid deployment rates of up to 2 miles per day in accessible areas once contracts were awarded.[38] CBP data indicated that post-construction, illegal crossings in newly fortified segments dropped by over 80% in the first year, validating the design's operational utility in metrics like breach attempts per mile.[35]Funding Strategies and Appropriations
The Trump administration pursued border barrier funding primarily through congressional appropriations and executive diversions under the national emergency framework established by Presidential Proclamation 9844 on February 15, 2019. Initial allocations came via the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018, which provided $1.375 billion for high-priority tactical infrastructure, including physical barriers along the U.S.-Mexico border. Subsequent fiscal year appropriations added to this base, with Congress approving a cumulative $5.84 billion for barrier planning and construction by fiscal year 2021, though annual amounts varied based on bipartisan negotiations and remained below the administration's requested levels of $25 billion or more. To supplement congressional funding, the administration repurposed existing federal resources, drawing approximately $3.6 billion from Department of Defense military construction accounts for 11 border wall projects, as authorized by Defense Secretary Mark Esper in September 2019. Additional diversions included $2.5 billion from DoD counter-narcotics programs and $601 million from drug interdiction funds, alongside roughly $500 million from Treasury Department asset forfeiture proceeds, enabling a total of about $13.7 billion in obligated funds for barrier construction by late 2020. These strategies prioritized rapid deployment over new legislative authority, with the overall effort constructing primarily new steel bollard barriers at an average cost of nearly $20 million per mile for replacement or expansion segments in rugged terrain.[39][40][41] The funding approach incorporated long-term cost efficiencies, with administration officials estimating that barriers would reduce operational expenses for border patrol by minimizing personnel-intensive apprehensions and pursuits, potentially offsetting initial outlays through decreased detention and processing demands. President Trump maintained that Mexico would indirectly contribute via enhanced trade terms in the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), ratified in 2020, by boosting U.S. economic leverage and remittances, though no verifiable direct or indirect payments from Mexico materialized for wall construction.[42][43]Challenges and Controversies
Legal Disputes and Court Rulings
Multiple lawsuits challenged the funding mechanisms for physical border barriers directed under Executive Order 13767, primarily alleging violations of the Appropriations Clause of the U.S. Constitution and statutory limits on executive reprogramming of funds. In Sierra Club v. Trump, filed in February 2019 by environmental groups including the Sierra Club and the American Civil Liberties Union, plaintiffs argued that President Trump's February 15, 2019, national emergency declaration under the National Emergencies Act (Proclamation 9844) unlawfully diverted approximately $2.5 billion in Department of Defense funds—originally appropriated for military construction and counter-drug activities—toward border barrier construction, bypassing congressional appropriations.[44] The U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California granted a permanent injunction in May 2019, ruling the diversions exceeded statutory authority under 10 U.S.C. § 2808 (military construction during emergencies) and § 8005 (reprogramming limits), as Congress had appropriated only $1.375 billion for barriers in the 2019 Consolidated Appropriations Act while rejecting the full $5.7 billion request.[45] The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the injunction in July 2019, emphasizing that the emergency declaration did not override congressional intent.[46] The Supreme Court intervened in Trump v. Sierra Club on July 26, 2019, granting a 5-4 stay of the Ninth Circuit's injunction, permitting the Trump administration to proceed with $2.5 billion in diversions for barrier projects in Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas pending full resolution, on grounds that the lower courts likely erred in finding the transfers unauthorized.[47] Similar challenges, such as California v. Trump, contested $3.6 billion in Treasury forfeiture funds under 10 U.S.C. § 2808, with district courts issuing injunctions that the Ninth Circuit partially upheld, but the Supreme Court stayed those as well in July 2019, allowing construction to continue across approximately 80 miles of barriers.[48] By October 2020, in a related Trump v. Sierra Club appeal concerning § 8005 transfers, the Supreme Court dismissed the case as improvidently granted after the Biden administration declined to defend the emergency declaration, rendering further review moot, though the earlier stays had enabled over $15 billion in total barrier funding, including diversions, during the Trump presidency.[49] These rulings affirmed broad executive discretion in national security reprogramming absent clear statutory prohibition, despite ongoing district-level findings of overreach. Environmental waivers invoked to expedite barrier construction under the order's directives faced separate statutory challenges. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) issued over 36 waivers between 2017 and 2021 pursuant to Section 102(c) of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 (IIRIRA), exempting projects from compliance with more than 20 federal laws, including the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), Endangered Species Act, and Clean Water Act, to address asserted impediments to border security.[50] Conservation groups, including Defenders of Wildlife and the Center for Biological Diversity, sued in cases such as Southwest Environmental Center v. McAleenan (2019), contending that the waivers violated separation of powers by delegating excessive legislative authority and failed to justify "impediments" under IIRIRA's narrow criteria. The U.S. District Court for the District of Arizona upheld the waivers' legality in December 2019, finding DHS's determinations of operational barriers sufficient and non-reviewable under the statute's explicit bar on judicial review.[51] The Supreme Court denied certiorari in February 2019 to petitions challenging waivers for New Mexico and Texas segments, effectively allowing construction to proceed without environmental reviews, though some projects faced temporary halts on procedural grounds before waivers were reapplied.[50] Challenges to detention and removal directives under the order yielded mixed outcomes, generally upholding executive enforcement priorities while imposing limits on implementation. Directives to end "catch-and-release" and expand detention capacity prompted suits alleging violations of the Immigration and Nationality Act's detention mandates, with federal courts in Jennings v. Rodriguez (2018) ruling that statutory indefinite detention provisions did not require bond hearings, affirming DHS discretion in prolonged holds for border crossers, though the Supreme Court remanded without resolving constitutionality.[52] Asylum-related implementations, such as restrictions on credible fear screenings tied to the order's security focus, faced injunctions in district courts for exceeding regulatory authority, but appellate reversals, including in East Bay Sanctuary Covenant v. Trump (2019), temporarily blocked expansions pending rulemaking, with the Supreme Court lifting stays to allow enforcement.[53] Overall, courts deferred to executive authority in border enforcement contexts, striking down few core provisions outright.Political Opposition and Budget Conflicts
Democratic members of Congress consistently opposed full funding for the physical border barriers planned under Executive Order 13767, prioritizing alternative border security measures such as personnel and technology enhancements over new wall construction.[54] In budget negotiations throughout 2017 and 2018, House and Senate Democrats blocked appropriations exceeding $1.3 billion for barriers, arguing that such expenditures were ineffective or morally objectionable, despite empirical precedents for physical deterrents.[55] [56] This resistance reflected a partisan shift from earlier bipartisan consensus, as mainstream media outlets and academic analyses often amplified portrayals of the barrier as inherently xenophobic, downplaying its alignment with national sovereignty principles evident in prior legislation.[57] The opposition intensified in late 2018 when President Trump requested $5.7 billion specifically for steel barrier segments in a continuing resolution to fund the government beyond December 21.[54] Democrats, controlling the House after the midterm elections, refused to include the full amount, offering instead limited funds for non-barrier security while conditioning any compromise on protections for programs like DACA.[58] This impasse directly caused the partial government shutdown beginning December 22, 2018, affecting approximately 800,000 federal workers and halting operations across multiple agencies.[59] The shutdown lasted 35 days, the longest in U.S. history, ending on January 25, 2019, without the requested wall funding after Trump agreed to a temporary reopening for negotiations.[59] [60] During this period, Democratic leaders maintained that conceding to the demand would validate an "immoral" policy, while Republican proponents highlighted inconsistencies with the Secure Fence Act of 2006, which authorized 700 miles of double-layered fencing along the southern border and passed with support from 90 House Democrats and broad Senate approval under President George W. Bush.[56] [61] Budget conflicts extended to interior enforcement tied to the order's directives, including threats to condition federal grants on compliance with immigration detention and removal policies, targeting sanctuary jurisdictions that limited cooperation with federal authorities.[62] The Trump administration proposed withholding billions in Justice Department and Homeland Security grants from non-compliant cities, framing it as essential for unified enforcement, but Democrats in Congress resisted these conditions in appropriations bills, viewing them as coercive overreach despite the order's emphasis on resource allocation for removals.[63] These disputes delayed implementation of detention expansions and contributed to fragmented funding, underscoring causal delays from partisan leverage over fiscal priorities rather than technical or logistical hurdles alone.[64]Criticisms from Opponents and Empirical Counterarguments
Opponents of Executive Order 13767, including policy analysts at the Center for American Progress, contended that the mandated border wall would fail to curb illegal crossings effectively, instead displacing migration routes to unsecured areas while incurring prohibitive costs estimated in the tens of billions for limited strategic value.[65] Empirical data from U.S. Customs and Border Protection, however, demonstrated substantial localized deterrence; in the Yuma Sector, illegal entries declined by over 87% in fiscal year 2020 compared to 2019 after installation of the border wall system, alongside disruptions to smuggling operations that reduced cartel activity in fortified zones.[66] Similar patterns emerged from prior barrier expansions under the Secure Fence Act of 2006, where apprehensions in San Diego and Yuma sectors fell by 90% or more in the immediate aftermath, attributable in analyses to physical impediments rather than solely economic factors.[67] Critics further alleged the wall embodied xenophobic motives and exacerbated humanitarian crises by funneling migrants into perilous desert terrains, potentially increasing fatalities, while linking broader enforcement to family separations portrayed as unprecedented cruelty.[68] Such separations, however, stemmed primarily from the administration's 2018 zero-tolerance policy prosecuting adult border crossers—separate from the barrier focus of EO 13767—and echoed practices under prior administrations, where thousands of unaccompanied minors were processed without systematic parental detention but with analogous outcomes in cases of suspected trafficking or fraud.[69] Border Patrol apprehensions, which serve as a proxy for crossing attempts, declined in barrier-affected sectors during implementation, correlating with fewer overall migrant exposures to deadly routes; one study noted displacement risks but found no net increase in fatalities when accounting for reduced total flows.[70] Fiscal objections highlighted construction overruns and opportunity costs, with detractors arguing funds could address root causes like foreign aid instead.[65] Counterassessments from the Federation for American Immigration Reform pegged the net annual cost of illegal immigration—including education, welfare, and law enforcement—at $150.7 billion in 2023, implying that even partial reductions in entries could yield lifetime savings far exceeding barrier expenditures through diminished public outlays and remittances outflows.[71] Environmental impacts drew scrutiny for habitat fragmentation and flooding risks, with Government Accountability Office reviews documenting vegetation loss, impeded wildlife corridors for species like jaguars and ocelots, and damage to indigenous cultural sites in areas where environmental waivers expedited construction.[72] These effects, while verifiable in localized assessments, were mitigated in designs incorporating wildlife gates and levee integrations, and paled against the scale of ecological pressures from unmanaged migration, such as trash accumulation and off-road vehicle damage in high-traffic zones pre-barrier.[73]Measured Impacts
Border Apprehension and Crossing Data
Following the issuance of Executive Order 13767 on January 25, 2017, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) recorded a decline in southwest border apprehensions from 408,870 in fiscal year (FY) 2016 to 303,916 in FY 2017, representing a 25.6% decrease amid heightened enforcement measures including barrier planning and prototyping.[74][75] This reduction aligned with broader deterrence efforts, though apprehensions remained above historical lows from prior decades. In sectors targeted for initial barrier enhancements, such as El Paso, localized apprehension drops were more pronounced; El Paso Sector apprehensions fell from approximately 20,000 in FY 2016 to under 14,000 in FY 2017, coinciding with reinforced fencing and wall system prototypes tested in the region starting in 2017.[75] Department of Homeland Security analyses attributed such sector-specific declines to physical barriers channeling migrant traffic into monitored areas, thereby improving detection rates and reducing undetected entries, or "gotaways," estimated at tens of thousands annually during FY 2017 compared to surges exceeding 390,000 in FY 2021.[76][77] Operational control metrics further reflected barrier impacts, with U.S. Border Patrol data indicating fewer assaults on agents in walled sectors; for instance, post-barrier construction in high-traffic areas like San Diego and Yuma precursors showed assault reductions of up to 90% by directing crossings away from direct confrontations, as detailed in DHS evaluations of pre- and post-fencing outcomes.[76][78]| Fiscal Year | Southwest Border Apprehensions | % Change from Prior Year |
|---|---|---|
| FY 2016 | 408,870 | - |
| FY 2017 | 303,916 | -25.6% |
| FY 2021 | ~1,659,000 (encounters incl. Title 42) | +446% from FY 2017 |