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Over 200 Migrants Arrested On Rioting Charges In El Paso Border Incident

More than 200 migrants have been arrested on misdemeanor rioting charges in connection with a late March border breach in El Paso that the local district attorney said injured Texas National Guard members, The Texas Tribune reports. The incident occurred March 21 at a border gate at the Rio Grande, where El Paso District Attorney Bill Hicks said nine migrants cut through concertina wire and assaulted National Guard members at the front of a group of roughly 1,000 asylum-seekers. An estimated 425 migrants broke away from the larger group and through the wire, rushing over the Guard members at the gate before reaching another fence, according to Hicks and a video published by the New York Post. Department of Public Safety troopers wanted to charge more than 300 people, but ultimately arrested approximately 221 of those individuals, Hicks said, including seven of the nine people who have been indicted on felony charges of rioting and assaulting a public servant. DPS is looking for the other two people accused of leading the charge, who were released by Border Patrol agents, Hicks said.


The rest of the migrants face misdemeanor rioting charges. It’s not clear how many remained at the county jail this week. On Easter Sunday, a judge released an unspecified number of the migrants on personal bonds after denying prosecutors’ request to postpone bond review hearings until after the holiday. Hicks said he was told the released migrants had federal detainers and were presumably deported following their release. “While I am not particularly concerned about immigration cases, I am concerned about violence and destruction of property,” Hicks said at a Tuesday press conference, alleging that migrants punched Guard members in the face and stomped on their knees and saying that one tried to take a Guards member’s gun. “If we don’t send a message that they can’t do that, I’m concerned.” Prosecutors will review each case to decide whether to prosecute individuals, even if they were released and deported, Hicks said. At a separate news conference Tuesday, El Paso Chief Public Defender Kelli Childress said the charges against the migrants were unfounded and that her office planned to challenge them. It is not immediately clear how many migrants her office is tasked with defending.

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