U.S. Customs and Border Protection
U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) is the federal law enforcement agency of the United States Department of Homeland Security responsible for regulating and facilitating international trade, collecting import duties, enforcing immigration and customs laws, and preventing terrorism and contraband smuggling at the nation's ports of entry and along its borders.[1] Established on March 1, 2003, under the Homeland Security Act of 2002, CBP consolidated the legacy functions of the U.S. Customs Service (dating to 1789), U.S. Border Patrol (established 1924), and immigration inspectors from the Immigration and Naturalization Service into the first unified border security entity.[2][3] With a workforce exceeding 65,000 personnel—including Border Patrol agents, customs officers, and air and marine interdiction specialists—CBP oversees 328 ports of entry and patrols more than 7,000 miles of land and coastal borders.[4] Its annual budget surpasses $19 billion, supporting operations that process over 400 million travelers and $3 trillion in legitimate trade annually while interdicting threats such as fentanyl precursors and unauthorized migrants.[4][5] CBP's core mission emphasizes securing borders against transnational threats like drug cartels and human smuggling networks, which empirical data show have driven surges in illegal crossings—peaking at over 2.4 million nationwide encounters in fiscal year 2022—necessitating expanded enforcement and infrastructure under causal pressures from policy gaps and foreign incentives.[5] Key achievements include seizing record quantities of narcotics, such as 27,000 pounds of fentanyl in FY2023, disrupting supply chains that fuel domestic overdose epidemics, though operational strains from recidivism rates above 20% and undetected "got-aways" estimated in the hundreds of thousands underscore ongoing challenges in achieving comprehensive control.[5] Controversies have centered on resource allocation amid fiscal constraints and legal disputes over interior enforcement authorities, with official reports highlighting the agency's evolution from post-9/11 unification to adapting to asymmetric threats without compromising trade facilitation efficiency.[6] As the world's largest law enforcement organization by personnel dedicated to border management, CBP embodies a layered defense strategy prioritizing detection, deterrence, and domain awareness over perimeter-only security.[1]Mission and Legal Framework
Core Responsibilities
U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) is tasked with protecting the American people, safeguarding the nation's borders, and enhancing economic prosperity through the enforcement of immigration and customs laws.[1] This mission involves securing U.S. borders against illegal entry, terrorism, and transnational crime while facilitating lawful international trade and travel across air, land, and sea environments.[1] CBP enforces more than 100 federal laws at over 300 ports of entry and along 5,000 miles of land borders with Canada and Mexico, as well as coastal waters.[7] A primary responsibility is preventing terrorism by detecting and interdicting terrorists, their weapons, and related instruments before they enter the United States.[1] This includes screening passengers, vehicles, cargo, and vessels for threats, with operations extending beyond borders through initiatives like the Container Security Initiative, which targets high-risk maritime shipments overseas.[7] CBP also counters narcotics smuggling and human trafficking, apprehending smugglers and seizing contraband such as drugs and illegal goods.[7] At ports of entry, CBP officers conduct inspections to enforce immigration laws, verify traveler admissibility, and collect customs duties while preventing the entry of prohibited items, including agricultural pests and diseases that could harm U.S. agriculture and public health.[8] Between ports, U.S. Border Patrol agents patrol to detect and prevent illegal crossings, responding to over 2.4 million encounters in fiscal year 2023 alone.[9] Additionally, CBP's Air and Marine Operations provide aerial and maritime surveillance to support interdiction efforts.[10] These functions ensure compliance with trade regulations, protecting revenue collection estimated at over $100 billion annually in duties and fees.Enforcement Powers and Legal Authorities
U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) derives its core enforcement powers from the Homeland Security Act of 2002, which consolidated authorities previously held by the U.S. Customs Service and Immigration and Naturalization Service under the Department of Homeland Security, enabling CBP to regulate and enforce laws at and between ports of entry.[11] These powers encompass immigration control under the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. § 1101 et seq.), customs duties and anti-smuggling measures under the Tariff Act of 1930 (19 U.S.C. § 1202 et seq.), and over 400 other federal statutes covering agriculture, public health, trade, and national security threats such as narcotics and terrorism.[12] CBP enforces these at 328 ports of entry and along 5,000 miles of land borders, 2.3 million miles of maritime approaches, and airspace, with primary responsibility for preventing unlawful entry of people and goods.[7] In immigration enforcement, CBP officers and Border Patrol agents have statutory authority to interrogate individuals regarding their right to enter or remain in the United States, apprehend aliens reasonably believed to be unlawfully present, and board vessels or aircraft within U.S. territorial waters or airspace for inspection (8 U.S.C. § 1357).[13] This includes operating immigration checkpoints up to 100 miles inland, as affirmed by Supreme Court precedents like United States v. Martinez-Fuerte (1976), which upheld brief stops to verify immigration status without individualized suspicion.[13] Agents may also access private lands within 25 miles of the border for surveillance and may temporarily detain suspects for up to 48 hours pending transfer to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) for interior enforcement.[14] For customs and trade enforcement, CBP assesses duties, inspects imports for compliance with trade laws, and seizes prohibited or undervalued goods, with authority to examine merchandise, records, and persons arriving from foreign territories (19 U.S.C. § 1581).[15] This extends to anti-smuggling operations targeting narcotics, counterfeit goods, and weapons, often in coordination with interagency task forces, and includes penalties for violations such as civil fines or criminal forfeiture under 19 U.S.C. § 1595a.[7] CBP's search powers rely on the border search exception to the Fourth Amendment, permitting warrantless routine inspections of persons, vehicles, baggage, and electronic devices at ports of entry and functional equivalents like international airports, derived from 19 C.F.R. § 162.6 and longstanding judicial recognition of plenary authority to control borders.[15] Non-routine searches, such as destructive or forensic device examinations, require reasonable suspicion, while arrests without warrants are authorized for immigration violations observed in the agent's presence or upon probable cause for felonies (8 U.S.C. § 1357(a)).[14][16] These authorities are constrained by constitutional limits: all searches must be reasonable, prolonged detentions require articulable facts, and excessive force or racial profiling can violate the Fourth, Fifth, or Fourteenth Amendments, as outlined in Department of Homeland Security directives and federal court rulings.[17] Oversight includes internal affairs investigations, congressional reporting requirements under the Consolidated Appropriations Act, and judicial review, ensuring powers do not extend to warrantless home entries absent exigent circumstances or consent.[14]History
Predecessor Agencies
The U.S. Customs Service, established on July 31, 1789, by an act of the First Congress, served as the primary predecessor for customs enforcement functions within CBP.[18] This agency, initially under the Department of the Treasury, collected import tariffs to fund the federal government, enforced trade laws, and conducted early border security duties, including preventing smuggling and revenue evasion.[19] By the late 20th century, it had expanded to include anti-terrorism measures, drug interdiction, and intellectual property protection, employing thousands of inspectors and investigators at ports of entry.[2] Upon the creation of the Department of Homeland Security in 2003, the Customs Service was transferred from Treasury and fully integrated into CBP, preserving its core revenue collection and inspection roles.[20] Immigration enforcement capabilities transferred to CBP originated from the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), particularly its border patrol and inspection arms. The U.S. Border Patrol was founded on May 28, 1924, under the Department of Labor's Immigration Service to curb illegal entries between ports of entry, initially with 450 mounted inspectors focusing on the Mexican border.[21] INS immigration inspectors, responsible for admissibility checks at ports since the agency's formal establishment in 1933 (building on 1891 statutes), handled visa and entry screenings.[20] These functions, totaling over 11,000 Border Patrol agents and inspectors by 2003, were shifted from the Department of Justice's INS to DHS, merging with customs personnel to form CBP's unified border security framework.[22] Agricultural inspection duties at borders derived from the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS), which conducted quarantine checks to prevent invasive species and pests since the Plant Quarantine Act of 1912.[2] In 2003, approximately 1,800 APHIS officers were reassigned to CBP to integrate plant and animal health safeguards into trade facilitation and smuggling prevention, enhancing detection of agro-terrorism risks.[2] This consolidation aimed to streamline "one face at the border" inspections, though early integration challenges arose from differing agency cultures and protocols.[23]Formation and Early Reorganization (2003–2010)
U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) was established on March 1, 2003, as the first unified border security agency within the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), created by the Homeland Security Act of 2002 in response to the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.[2] The agency consolidated core border enforcement functions from multiple predecessor entities, including the U.S. Customs Service (transferred from the Department of the Treasury), the U.S. Border Patrol (from the Immigration and Naturalization Service), immigration inspectors from the INS, and agricultural quarantine inspectors from the Department of Agriculture's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.[20] This integration aimed to streamline operations, enhance intelligence sharing, and prioritize counterterrorism alongside traditional customs and immigration duties, initially overseeing about 58,000 employees across 327 ports of entry and over 6,000 miles of border. Robert C. Bonner, former Commissioner of the U.S. Customs Service, was appointed CBP's inaugural Commissioner, serving from 2003 to March 2005.[24] Under Bonner's leadership, early efforts focused on merging disparate agency cultures and technologies, including the establishment of the Air and Marine Branch in 2004 by consolidating aviation and maritime assets from legacy Customs and Border Patrol components into a dedicated operational directorate for aerial and nautical interdiction.[25] In 2005, Bonner reorganized internal oversight by renaming the Office of Internal Affairs to the Office of Management Inspections and Integrity Assurance to strengthen accountability and corruption prevention.[20] W. Ralph Basham succeeded Bonner as Commissioner from March 2005 to October 2008, during which CBP navigated growing enforcement demands, including expanded trade facilitation programs and border infrastructure projects.[26] Jayson P. Ahern served as Acting Commissioner from 2008 to 2009, overseeing continued integration of field operations. On March 31, 2007, the agency underwent a formal name change from the Bureau of Customs and Border Protection to U.S. Customs and Border Protection, reflecting its matured structure and statutory evolution within DHS.[27] Alan D. Bersin was confirmed as Commissioner in March 2010, marking the transition to intensified focus on interior enforcement coordination amid rising unauthorized crossings.[28] These formative years involved significant challenges, such as harmonizing regulatory frameworks across merged components and addressing personnel retention amid rapid expansion, with CBP's workforce growing to support enhanced screening at ports and between them.[25] By 2010, foundational reorganizations had positioned CBP as DHS's largest component, with operational divisions including Office of Field Operations, Border Patrol, and Air and Marine, laying the groundwork for subsequent security enhancements.[29]Modern Developments (2011–Present)
Following the resignation of Commissioner Alan Bersin in December 2011, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) operated under a series of acting and confirmed commissioners, including David V. Aguilar as acting commissioner, Thomas S. Winkowski from 2012 to 2014, and Gil Kerlikowske, confirmed in March 2014.[30][31] During the Obama administration, Border Patrol apprehensions on the southwest border declined steadily from 340,252 in fiscal year (FY) 2011 to around 300,000 annually by FY 2017, reflecting sustained enforcement amid economic factors and prior investments in infrastructure.[32] However, surges occurred, including over 68,000 unaccompanied minors apprehended in FY 2014, straining resources and leading to temporary facilities.[33] CBP expanded trusted traveler programs like Global Entry in 2013, processing 98% of incoming travelers at 44 airports, and in 2016, Congress passed the Trade Facilitation and Trade Enforcement Act, enhancing CBP's trade oversight authorities.[20] Under the Trump administration, CBP implemented policies aimed at deterrence, including construction of over 450 miles of border wall by 2021, the Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP, or "Remain in Mexico") requiring asylum seekers to await hearings in Mexico, and invocation of Title 42 public health expulsions in March 2020 amid COVID-19, which expelled over 2.8 million migrants by its end.[34] These measures contributed to apprehensions dropping to a 45-year low of 405,036 in FY 2017 and remaining below 500,000 annually through FY 2020.[35] Leadership transitioned to acting commissioners like Kevin K. McAleenan in 2019 and Mark A. Morgan, with CBP enhancing interdiction, seizing record amounts of fentanyl—over 4,500 pounds in FY 2020—primarily at ports of entry where 92% of such drugs were intercepted from FY 2018-2024.[36][37] The Biden administration reversed several Trump-era policies, including halting border wall construction, terminating MPP in 2021, and rescinding enforcement priorities, correlating with record southwest border encounters totaling over 8 million from FY 2021-2024, including 2.5 million in FY 2023 alone.[38][39] Introduction of the CBP One app in January 2023 facilitated over 813,000 asylum appointment scheduling by August 2024, often leading to parole entries, while encounters overwhelmed processing, with monthly highs exceeding 300,000 in December 2023. Fentanyl seizures rose to 27,000 pounds nationwide in FY 2023, yet overdose deaths surpassed 100,000 annually, underscoring persistent smuggling challenges mostly at legal ports.[40] Commissioners included Chris Magnus briefly in 2022 before acting roles by Troy A. Miller. In the second Trump administration starting January 2025, CBP rescinded Biden-era guidelines, ended CBP One usage, and expanded expedited removals, resulting in southwest border encounters plummeting to 4,600 in July 2025—a 91.8% drop from July 2024—and achieving the lowest FY apprehensions since 1970 by October 2025, with zero releases into the U.S. interior for four consecutive months.[41][42] CBP issued the 2025-2029 U.S. Border Patrol Strategy in September 2025, emphasizing impedance, organizational excellence, and partnerships to counter irregular migration and transnational threats.[43] Drug seizures continued surging, with August 2025 yields including 55,000 pounds of narcotics, reflecting intensified operations.[44]Organizational Structure
Leadership and Commissioners
The Commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) is the agency's chief executive, nominated by the President of the United States and confirmed by the Senate, with responsibility for directing over 60,000 personnel in border security, trade enforcement, and immigration control under the Department of Homeland Security.[45] The Commissioner is supported by a Deputy Commissioner, who serves as the senior career official overseeing daily operations, and various Executive Assistant Commissioners managing operational divisions such as Field Operations, Air and Marine, and Trade.[46] As of October 2025, Rodney S. Scott holds the position of Commissioner, having been confirmed by the Senate in June 2025; he is the first individual from the ranks of the U.S. Border Patrol to lead the agency.[47] [48] Scott previously served as Chief of the U.S. Border Patrol from February 2020 to January 2021.[49] CBP was established on March 1, 2003, under the Homeland Security Act of 2002, with Robert C. Bonner appointed as its inaugural Commissioner by President George W. Bush.[50] Bonner, formerly Commissioner of the U.S. Customs Service, led the integration of predecessor agencies including Customs, Immigration and Naturalization Service inspectors, and Border Patrol into a unified border security entity.[2] He resigned in September 2005, effective November 2005, amid efforts to consolidate post-9/11 security functions.[51] Following Bonner's departure, acting leadership transitioned through officials such as Jayson P. Ahern before W. Ralph Basham was sworn in as the second confirmed Commissioner on June 5, 2006.[20] Basham, previously Director of the U.S. Secret Service, focused on enhancing trade facilitation alongside security during his tenure ending in early 2009.[20] Subsequent commissioners included Alan D. Bersin, appointed in March 2010 to prioritize risk-based border management.[52] Gil Kerlikowske was confirmed as Commissioner in March 2014, bringing experience from the Office of National Drug Control Policy to emphasize interior enforcement and technology deployment.[53] The agency has frequently relied on acting commissioners during vacancies, including David V. Aguilar (2011), Thomas S. Winkowski (2011–2014), Kevin K. McAleenan (2017–2018), John P. Sanders (2019), Mark A. Morgan (2019–2021), Troy A. Miller (2021 and 2022), and Chris Magnus (confirmed 2021, served until 2022).[54] [55] [56] These interim leaders often managed surges in border encounters and policy shifts under varying administrations.[45]| Commissioner | Term Start | Key Focus or Note | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Robert C. Bonner | March 1, 2003 | Agency formation and integration | [50] |
| W. Ralph Basham | June 5, 2006 | Trade-security balance | [20] |
| Alan D. Bersin | March 30, 2010 | Risk management | [52] |
| Gil Kerlikowske | March 6, 2014 | Technology and drug enforcement | [53] |
| Rodney S. Scott | June 2025 | Border Patrol perspective on enforcement | [47] |
Operational Divisions and Field Offices
The operational divisions of U.S. Customs and Border Protection encompass the Office of Field Operations, United States Border Patrol, and Air and Marine Operations, which collectively manage border enforcement, trade facilitation, and interdiction activities across land, air, and sea domains.[57] These divisions operate under the oversight of executive assistant commissioners and coordinate with other CBP components to address smuggling, illegal migration, and security threats.[45] The Office of Field Operations (OFO) directs activities at the 328 official ports of entry, including airports, seaports, and land borders, where it conducts inspections of over 1.1 million travelers and 90,000 cargo containers daily to enforce immigration, customs, and agricultural laws.[58] OFO is structured around 20 major field offices in cities such as Atlanta, Baltimore, Boston, Chicago, Detroit, El Paso, Houston, Laredo, Miami, and New York, each overseeing regional ports and deploying approximately 25,000 personnel including CBP officers, agriculture specialists, and import specialists.[59] These field offices facilitate preclearance operations abroad and coordinate with partners like U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement for outbound enforcement.[60] United States Border Patrol maintains surveillance and control between ports of entry along approximately 6,000 miles of U.S. land borders with Mexico and Canada, plus coastal zones, through patrolling, interior checkpoints, and rapid response teams.[10] It is divided into 20 sectors, including nine primary southwest border sectors such as San Diego (California), Tucson (Arizona), El Paso (Texas), Laredo (Texas), and Rio Grande Valley (Texas), alongside northern sectors like Detroit and Swanton, with each sector containing multiple stations for localized operations.[61] Stations within sectors, such as those in the Houlton or Calais areas along the northern border, focus on vehicle pursuits, sign-cutting for crossers, and anti-smuggling initiatives, employing tactics informed by intelligence on migration routes and cartel activities.[62] Air and Marine Operations (AMO) supports the other divisions with aviation and maritime assets, operating multi-role aircraft, unmanned systems, and vessels for detection, interdiction, and surveillance of airborne and waterborne threats.[63] AMO is organized into regional branches, including the Great Lakes Air and Marine Branch (supporting Detroit Sector), Houston Air and Marine Branch, Caribbean Air and Marine Branch, and Jacksonville Air and Marine Branch, with over 50 operating locations nationwide for rapid deployment.[64] These units have conducted thousands of interceptions annually, targeting narcotics and human smuggling via air and sea vectors.[65]Personnel
Roles and Specializations
U.S. Border Patrol Agents primarily secure the nation's land borders and coastal areas between ports of entry, detecting and preventing illegal entries, terrorist threats, drug smuggling, and other illicit activities through patrols, surveillance, and apprehensions.[66] Their duties encompass line-watch operations, traffic checkpoints, administrative and city patrols, transportation checks, and boat patrols, often requiring multilingual skills for interactions with migrants and smugglers.[67] Specializations include elite units such as the Border Patrol Tactical Unit (BORTAC) for high-risk operations, Search, Trauma, and Rescue Teams (BORSTAR) for medical response in remote areas, and the Special Operations Group (SOG) for advanced tactical, intelligence, and emergency deployments.[68] CBP Officers, stationed at over 300 ports of entry including airports, seaports, and land borders, enforce immigration, customs, and agriculture laws by inspecting travelers, vehicles, cargo, and vessels to facilitate legitimate trade and travel while interdicting threats like narcotics, weapons, and inadmissible persons.[69] Responsibilities involve conducting examinations, verifying documentation, operating detection technology, and coordinating with other agencies for secondary inspections or arrests, with a focus on high-volume environments processing millions of entries annually.[60] Within this role, specializations include Import Specialists who scrutinize trade compliance and valuation to prevent revenue loss and unfair practices, and CBP Technicians who maintain and operate non-intrusive inspection equipment like X-ray scanners.[60] Agriculture Specialists within the Office of Field Operations protect U.S. agriculture and natural resources by inspecting international shipments, passenger baggage, and cargo for prohibited pests, diseases, and invasive species that could devastate crops or ecosystems.[70] They apply expertise in plant pathology, entomology, and veterinary science to conduct risk-based targeting, sampling, and laboratory coordination, intercepting millions of pounds of potentially harmful items each year to safeguard economic sectors valued at over $1 trillion.[71] Specializations often involve advanced training in cargo targeting or partnership with agencies like the USDA for joint enforcement against agricultural smuggling.[72] Air and Marine Operations personnel specialize in aviation and maritime interdiction, deploying fixed-wing aircraft, helicopters, and vessels for surveillance, pursuit, and domain awareness beyond the immediate border.[73] Air Interdiction Agents pilot surveillance platforms for real-time tracking of airborne threats, while Marine Interdiction Agents command high-speed boats for coastal patrols and vessel boardings to disrupt smuggling networks.[74] Detection Enforcement Officers focus on radar and sensor operations to identify anomalies, supporting contingency missions and extended border enforcement in coordination with Joint Interagency Task Forces.[75] These roles emphasize tactical mobility, with specializations in night operations, electronic warfare, and international deployments to counter transnational threats.[63] Additional specialized positions across CBP include K-9 handlers who deploy detection dogs for narcotics, explosives, and agriculture inspections, and intelligence analysts who process data for threat prioritization, often requiring cross-training among core roles to address multifaceted border challenges.[76] All personnel undergo rigorous academy training tailored to their specialization, emphasizing firearms proficiency, legal authorities, and scenario-based simulations to ensure operational effectiveness.[77]Recruitment, Training, and Retention Challenges
U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has faced persistent difficulties in recruiting sufficient law enforcement personnel, particularly U.S. Border Patrol agents, amid rising migrant encounters at the southwest border. A Government Accountability Office (GAO) assessment in September 2024 found that CBP fell short of its staffing targets for law enforcement positions over the prior decade, with Border Patrol agent onboard strength decreasing annually from fiscal years 2021 through 2024 despite hiring efforts. Officials attributed these shortfalls to factors including limited amenities in remote border locations, such as inadequate medical facilities and schools, which deter applicants from rural assignments; competition from municipal and state law enforcement offering urban postings and higher starting pay; and negative public perceptions of border enforcement roles fueled by media coverage of humanitarian crises. To counter these, CBP introduced recruitment incentives including up to $30,000 in bonuses for new Border Patrol agents in 2024 and expanded targeted outreach via job fairs and social media campaigns.[78][79][80] Training for CBP personnel involves rigorous programs emphasizing physical fitness, legal knowledge, and operational skills, but scaling these amid hiring pushes has strained resources and quality control. Border Patrol agent candidates undergo a approximately six-month basic academy at facilities in Artesia, New Mexico, or Glynco, Georgia, covering immigration law, firearms proficiency, defensive tactics, and Spanish language basics, preceded by a six-week preparatory physical training regimen to reduce injury risks. CBP Officers complete a 150-day Field Operations Academy focused on trade enforcement, anti-terrorism screening, and port operations. Challenges include high training costs—estimated at over $100,000 per new agent in earlier GAO reviews—and difficulties maintaining standards during rapid expansions, as seen in post-2021 hiring surges where accelerated onboarding correlated with elevated post-academy attrition due to unmet expectations or inadequate preparation for field stresses.[81][82][83] Retention issues compound recruitment woes, with attrition outpacing hires for Border Patrol agents and contributing to overall staffing gaps below congressional mandates of around 22,000 agents. While CBP's law enforcement attrition rates hovered below the federal average of 6 percent through 2023, they rose to 1.8 percent for Border Patrol agents by 2024, driven by burnout from mandatory overtime, frequent assaults by migrants—numbering over 10,000 incidents annually in recent years—and policy shifts perceived as undermining enforcement authority, such as expanded catch-and-release practices that agents reported eroded morale. A Department of Homeland Security Inspector General report in May 2023 warned that surging encounters exacerbated turnover risks, projecting higher early retirements as agents sought less demanding roles. An anticipated wave of retirements among CBP Officers, affecting 20 percent eligible for enhanced benefits by late 2024, further threatens continuity, prompting initiatives like morale surveys, wellness programs, and rotation policies to remote stations.[78][84][85][86]Operations
Southwest Border Security
The U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) manages security along the approximately 1,954-mile U.S.-Mexico border through its U.S. Border Patrol (USBP), which conducts patrols between ports of entry to detect and apprehend individuals attempting illegal entry.[9] USBP operates in nine southwest border sectors, deploying agents, vehicles, sensors, and aerial assets to interdict migrants, smugglers, and threats.[87] CBP's Office of Field Operations (OFO) handles inspections at 28 southwest ports of entry, screening vehicles, pedestrians, and cargo for inadmissible persons and contraband.[9] Migrant encounters at the southwest border, encompassing USBP Title 8 apprehensions and OFO Title 8 inadmissibles, reached a peak of over 2.4 million in fiscal year (FY) 2023 before declining to 2.1 million in FY 2024, with 1.5 million occurring between ports of entry.[9] In FY 2025, encounters dropped sharply following policy changes, with U.S. Border Patrol apprehensions nationwide falling to historic lows, such as 8,024 in June 2025—the lowest monthly total on record—and fewer than 8,400 irregular crossers intercepted in April 2025.[88][89] From January 21 to 31, 2025, southwest border apprehensions plummeted 85% compared to the prior year, attributed to enhanced enforcement and deterrence measures.[90] Overall, FY 2025 marked the lowest annual Border Patrol apprehensions since 1970.[91] CBP employs physical barriers as part of a layered defense, with over 700 miles of border wall constructed, demonstrating effectiveness in channeling illegal activity to monitored areas and enabling rapid agent response.[92] Barriers integrated with detection technology, lighting, and cameras—termed the "Smart Wall"—enhance situational awareness and reduce undetected crossings.[93] Construction continues to prioritize high-traffic zones, slowing intrusions and protecting agents during patrols.[94] Drug interdiction remains a core focus, with CBP seizing record amounts of fentanyl primarily at southwest ports of entry, where nearly 90% of encounters occur in vehicles or on persons.[95] In FY 2024, fentanyl seizures escalated, reflecting intensified inspections amid cartel smuggling tactics, though the majority of drugs are intercepted before entry.[40] CBP's whole-of-agency approach, including canine units and non-intrusive scanners, supports broader efforts against synthetic opioids flowing from Mexico.[96] Interagency collaboration bolsters operations, with Department of Defense support providing personnel and engineering aid since at least 2001, and recent U.S. Coast Guard patrols along the Rio Grande aiding in apprehensions.[97][98] Despite reductions in encounters, challenges persist from transnational criminal organizations exploiting vulnerabilities, underscoring the need for sustained resources and technology deployment.[99]Ports of Entry and Trade Enforcement
The Office of Field Operations within U.S. Customs and Border Protection oversees security and facilitation at 328 ports of entry, encompassing air, land, and sea facilities across the United States.[100] These ports process vast volumes of passengers, vehicles, and cargo, with CBP officers conducting inspections to enforce immigration laws, collect customs duties, prevent agricultural pests, and interdict contraband such as narcotics and counterfeit goods.[1] In fiscal year 2020, CBP handled over 238 million travelers at these ports, alongside billions in imported goods value.[101] Inspections at ports involve primary screening of declarations and biometric verification, followed by secondary examinations using non-intrusive imaging, canine units, and targeted cargo scans for high-risk shipments.[100] CBP employs risk-based strategies like the Resource Optimization Strategy to prioritize threats amid high traffic, physically inspecting a fraction of arrivals—such as approximately 3 percent of ocean containers and 24 percent of truck cargo—while relying on manifests, intelligence, and partnerships for broader coverage.[100] This approach facilitates over $3 trillion in annual U.S. imports but exposes gaps, as evidenced by ongoing smuggling of fentanyl precursors and substandard products through low-volume inspections.[102] Trade enforcement at ports targets violations of U.S. trade laws, including intellectual property rights infringement, antidumping and countervailing duty evasion, and imports produced with forced labor.[103] The Trade Facilitation and Trade Enforcement Act of 2015, enacted on February 24, 2016, bolstered CBP's capabilities by mandating enhanced IPR coordination and establishing the Enforce and Protect Act for duty evasion probes.[103] In fiscal year 2024, CBP seized IPR-violating goods with a manufacturer's suggested retail price exceeding prior years, marking more than double the volume from fiscal year 2020, primarily counterfeits from high-risk origins.[104] CBP also administers the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act through Withhold Release Orders and entity listings, detaining shipments linked to Xinjiang region supply chains.[105] The explosion of de minimis shipments—exempt from duties under Section 321 and totaling over 1.1 billion filings in fiscal year 2024—has intensified enforcement challenges, enabling rapid importation of small packages that often conceal narcotics, unsafe products, or tariff-evading goods from China.[106] EAPA investigations, initiated by stakeholders alleging evasion, resulted in multiple enforcement actions in recent years, recovering millions in evaded duties.[107] These efforts underscore CBP's dual mandate, though resource constraints at ports limit comprehensive scrutiny of the $3 trillion trade flow.[102]Air and Marine Interdiction
Air and Marine Operations (AMO), a component of U.S. Customs and Border Protection, employs aviation and maritime assets to detect, interdict, and disrupt threats including terrorism, narcotics smuggling, illegal migration, and weapons trafficking across U.S. air and maritime domains.[63] AMO's missions encompass providing domain awareness through surveillance, investigating transnational criminal networks, interdicting unlawful entrants and cargo, and supporting national contingencies such as disaster response.[74] With approximately 1,800 federal agents and mission support personnel, AMO operates over 200 aircraft—including P-3 Long Range Trackers for extended aerial and maritime target detection, DHC-8 Maritime Patrol Aircraft for surveillance, and UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters for pursuit and interdiction—and around 300 marine vessels for high-speed patrols, vessel boardings, and enforcement actions.[75][65] These capabilities enable rapid response across U.S. borders, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands, integrating with other federal agencies like the U.S. Coast Guard for joint operations.[63] The historical foundation of AMO traces to the 1789 establishment of the U.S. Customs Service, which initiated coastal patrols to curb smuggling, evolving with aerial surveillance from seized aircraft in 1922 and the formal Customs Aviation Program in 1969 to counter airborne drug trafficking.[108] Post-9/11 reorganization under the Department of Homeland Security integrated air assets from Customs and Border Patrol into CBP Air in 2005, incorporating unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) like the Predator B for border monitoring, followed by P-3 deployments in 1984, Multi-Role Enforcement Aircraft in 2011, and enhanced maritime vessels such as 41-foot SAFE boats in 2019.[108] This consolidation has expanded interdiction scope beyond traditional revenue protection to comprehensive national security, with milestones including the 2008 seizure of 363,000 pounds of narcotics and arrests of 1,850 smugglers.[108] In fiscal year 2024, AMO logged 92,000 flight hours and 46,000 float hours, yielding 1,009 arrests, 48,609 apprehensions of illegal aliens, and seizures or disruptions of 256,883 pounds of narcotics—including 244,781 pounds of cocaine, 2,235 pounds of fentanyl, and 3,061 pounds of methamphetamine—along with 1,499 weapons and $12.5 million in currency.[109] Regional efforts highlighted effectiveness: the Southwest region seized 9,704 pounds of narcotics and 769 weapons, while the Southeast disrupted 87,610 pounds of narcotics and interdicted 3,382 pounds of cocaine valued at $35 million; nationally, air security operations disrupted 200,319 pounds of narcotics and led to nine vessel seizures.[109] UAS platforms, such as the MQ-9 Reaper variant, contributed 21,437 detections and disrupted 22,650 pounds of cocaine through extended 27.5-hour missions.[109] Air Interdiction Agents pilot fixed-wing, rotary-wing, and UAS assets for tracking and interception, while Marine Interdiction Agents command vessels for patrols, surveillance, and high-speed pursuits to enforce maritime law.[63] These outcomes, reported by CBP, underscore AMO's role in layered border defense, though interdiction success depends on integration with ground and port operations amid persistent smuggling adaptations.[109]Interior Enforcement and Counter-Terrorism
U.S. Border Patrol, a component of CBP, conducts interior enforcement operations primarily within the 100-mile zone from U.S. external boundaries, which encompasses approximately two-thirds of the nation's population.[110] These efforts include operating approximately 170 traffic checkpoints—33 permanent and others temporary—along interior highways to interdict illegal entrants, smugglers, and contraband between ports of entry.[10][111] Roving patrols and transportation checks further support these activities, focusing on verifying immigration status and apprehending violators, as authorized by federal statutes and affirmed in court decisions such as United States v. Martinez-Fuerte (1976), which upheld brief immigration inquiries at fixed checkpoints without individualized suspicion.[13] CBP's Air and Marine Operations contribute to interior enforcement by providing aerial and maritime surveillance, interdiction, and domain awareness beyond immediate border areas, aiding in the detection of illicit networks and supporting ground operations nationwide.[63] In fiscal year 2023, Border Patrol checkpoints and related interior activities resulted in over 20,000 apprehensions of individuals previously removed or inadmissible, alongside seizures of narcotics and vehicles used in smuggling.[111] These operations prioritize immigration law enforcement but intersect with broader criminal interdiction, though CBP's mandate remains distinct from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's (ICE) primary interior removal and investigation roles.[112] Counter-terrorism forms a core pillar of CBP's mission, emphasizing prevention at and near borders while leveraging interior-based intelligence to disrupt threats.[1] The National Targeting Center (NTC) in Virginia serves as CBP's hub for risk analysis, fusing data from multiple agencies to identify potential terrorists, their instruments, and illicit networks before they reach U.S. territory.[113] NTC operations have supported the screening of billions of traveler records annually against watchlists, contributing to the denial of entry for thousands flagged for terrorism concerns since its inception post-9/11.[114] Tactical Terrorism Response Teams (TTRTs), specialized CBP units trained in counterterrorism interrogation techniques, operate at 79 ports of entry and across all 20 Border Patrol sectors to scrutinize high-risk individuals.[115] Between 2017 and 2019, TTRTs conducted over 600,000 secondary inspections, including approximately 180,000 on U.S. citizens, often extending beyond standard immigration queries to probe terrorism indicators.[115][116] The Anti-Terrorism Contraband Enforcement Team (A-TCET) complements this by targeting narcotics and weapons flows that could fund or arm terrorist activities.[8] The Border Patrol Tactical Unit (BORTAC) provides rapid response for high-threat scenarios, including potential terrorist incidents, with deployments supporting national security events.[117] These efforts have yielded arrests of individuals linked to foreign terrorist organizations attempting entry, though independent reviews have criticized TTRT practices for overreach, including prolonged detentions of citizens and journalists without probable cause tied to immigration violations.[118][116]Equipment and Technology
Vehicles and Assets
U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) maintains a fleet of ground vehicles tailored for border patrol and enforcement operations, including sport utility vehicles (SUVs), pickup trucks, and specialized units such as all-terrain vehicles (ATVs) for navigating rugged terrain along the U.S.-Mexico border.[119] These vehicles are often modified with reinforced frames, off-road capabilities, and communication equipment to support pursuits and surveillance in remote areas.[120] Equestrian patrols utilize horses in regions where wheeled vehicles are impractical, providing mobility across uneven landscapes and reducing noise for stealth operations.[121] Air and Marine Operations (AMO) oversees CBP's aerial assets, comprising over 200 aircraft including fixed-wing airplanes, helicopters, and unmanned aerial systems deployed for detection, interdiction, and domain awareness across air domains.[63] These assets logged nearly 100,000 flight hours in fiscal year 2023, supporting missions such as tracking illicit crossings and smuggling activities.[122] Helicopters facilitate rapid response and aerial pursuits, while fixed-wing platforms enable long-endurance surveillance over vast border regions.[123] Marine vessels form another critical component, with over 300 boats and cutters operating in coastal waters, rivers, and inland waterways to interdict maritime smuggling and enforce navigation laws.[63] These include high-speed interceptors and larger patrol craft equipped for adverse weather conditions, contributing to 43,000 float hours in fiscal year 2023.[122] AMO's maritime fleet supports joint operations with other agencies, focusing on disrupting transnational criminal networks via waterborne routes.[124] Overall, CBP's vehicles and assets are integrated to enhance operational effectiveness, with ongoing enhancements like standardized enclosed vessels for improved offshore capabilities.[125]Surveillance and Detection Systems
The U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) deploys an integrated array of surveillance and detection technologies to monitor border areas, detect incursions, and identify threats such as illegal crossings and smuggling operations. These systems emphasize persistent coverage, combining fixed and mobile assets to enable real-time detection without constant agent presence. Primary components include video surveillance towers, ground sensors, radar, and unmanned aircraft systems (UAS), often networked for layered defense along the southwest and northern borders.[126][127] The Remote Video Surveillance System (RVSS), a cornerstone of CBP's border monitoring, features elevated towers with electro-optical and infrared cameras capable of day-night operations, remote pan-tilt-zoom control, and wide-area coverage. Initially deployed around 2011, RVSS towers allow agents to survey expansive terrains, reducing the need for vehicle patrols and enabling rapid response to detected activity. Upgrades since 2016, managed by contractors like General Dynamics Information Technology, have integrated advanced optics and stabilization to improve reliability in harsh environments. As of 2024, however, reports indicate that approximately 30% of RVSS cameras remain inoperable, particularly in high-traffic sectors, prompting congressional inquiries into maintenance and funding shortfalls.[128][129][130][131] Ground-based detection relies on unattended sensors, including seismic, magnetic, and infrared devices buried or mounted along border fences and trails, which trigger alerts for foot or vehicle traffic. Radar systems, both fixed and mobile, supplement these by penetrating foliage and operating in low-visibility conditions to classify objects as human, animal, or mechanical. The Border Surveillance Systems (BSS) framework encompasses these technologies, integrating commercial off-the-shelf radar, thermal imagers, and ground sensors for automated threat classification. Department of Defense contributions, such as stabilized optical systems with thermal cameras and laser rangefinders, have bolstered southern border deployments since 2023, focusing on non-lethal monitoring.[127][132] Aerial surveillance through CBP's Air and Marine Operations includes UAS like the MQ-9 Predator B and smaller tactical drones for overhead detection and tracking. These platforms, equipped with high-resolution cameras and sensors, provide persistent aerial overwatch, identifying group sizes, armament, and trajectories during crossings. Small UAS, introduced for rapid deployment by ground agents, support real-time air support in remote areas, with over 100 flights daily in peak operations. Integration of artificial intelligence aids in processing sensor data from radar, video, and infrared feeds to automate anomaly detection, though full AI autonomy remains in testing phases as of 2024.[133][134][135] At ports of entry, biometric detection systems enhance threat identification through facial recognition and iris scanning, verifying traveler identities against watchlists and passports. Deployed at over 113 land ports and major air and sea facilities, these tools process millions of entries annually, flagging discrepancies in real time to detect imposters or fugitives.[136][137]Budget and Resources
Funding History and Trends
U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) was established on March 1, 2003, through the merger of functions from the U.S. Customs Service, Immigration and Naturalization Service, and other entities under the newly formed Department of Homeland Security, with an initial fiscal year 2003 budget of approximately $5.9 billion to support border security, trade enforcement, and immigration processing operations.[138] This funding level reflected the post-9/11 prioritization of integrated border management, absorbing resources previously allocated across fragmented agencies.[139] From fiscal year 2003 to 2024, CBP's enacted appropriations more than tripled, driven by legislative mandates such as the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 and the Secure Fence Act of 2006, which expanded personnel, infrastructure, and technology investments amid escalating terrorism risks and illegal crossings.[138] Annual budgets grew steadily, with notable accelerations during periods of heightened border encounters; for instance, supplemental appropriations in the early 2010s addressed surges in unaccompanied minors, while the 2018-2019 omnibus packages added billions for barriers and agents.[140] By fiscal year 2022, funding reached $16.3 billion, supporting 64,300 positions and 60,455 full-time equivalents focused on operations, maintenance, and procurement.[141]| Fiscal Year | Enacted/Requested Budget (billions USD) | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 2003 | 5.9 | Initial post-merger baseline.[138] |
| 2022 | 16.3 | Emphasis on personnel and technology.[141] |
| 2023 | 17.5 (request; enacted ~16.7) | Increased for border operations.[142] [143] |
| 2024 | ~19.6 | Boost for enforcement amid migration surges.[143] [144] |
| 2025 | 19.8 (request) | Proposed expansions in frontline resources.[4] |