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Texas successfully appeals to maintain floating barrier in Rio Grande to prevent illegal crossings.

A U.S. appeals court has temporarily put on hold an earlier order‍ issued this week requiring Texas ‍Gov.​ Greg Abbott‌ to remove a 1,000-foot barrier ‍of floating buoys ‍deployed in ​the Rio Grande as part of efforts⁤ to deter illegal immigrants ​from crossing the U.S.–Mexico border.

The Sept. 7 decision ⁣was made by the New Orleans-based Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals—made up of a three-judge panel of two Democratic appointees and a Republican appointee—court documents (pdf) show.

Thursday’s ruling⁢ means the state will be allowed to leave ​the barrier in ⁣place for now while⁢ the case plays out‌ in court.

The ‌barrier of floating and rotating⁢ buoys,‍ which are ‌between four to six ‍feet each, has been⁢ in place near the city of Eagle Pass since July as part ​of Mr. Abbott’s Operation Lone Star, a multi-agency effort to deter illegal crossings and prevent human smuggling across the border.

However, the Biden administration’s Department of ‌Justice promptly ⁣sued Texas over the water barriers ⁣in July, citing⁢ humanitarian and environmental ‌concerns⁤ and arguing‍ that it disrupts navigation and was installed without permission from ⁣the ‌U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

Biden administration officials further contended the floating buoys may damage relations with ⁤Mexico and violate⁣ federal law and treaties⁢ with Mexico.

Thursday’s order⁤ came just one day after​ U.S. District Court Judge David Ezra, a President​ Ronald Reagan ‌appointee, issued a preliminary injunction requiring Texas to relocate the buoys to an embankment ⁣on the Texas side⁣ of the river—and to cover⁣ the⁢ cost of moving ⁢them—by Sept 15.

Workers make adjustments to buoys being used as a barrier along the Rio Grande, in Eagle Pass, Texas, on Aug. 21, 2023. (Eric Gay/AP Photo)

Barrier a ‘Threat ‌to Human Life’

In ​his order (pdf) the judge wrote that there is ‍”little doubt that Texas’s 1,000-foot long, four-foot-wide ‌floating ‌barrier, anchored with metal wiring to heavy concrete blocks on⁢ the ‌bed of the river, constitutes an obstruction to the navigation of the Rio Grande.”

“The Court finds that ⁣the barrier’s threat to human life,⁣ its impairment to free ⁤and safe ‍navigation, and its contraindication to the balance ‍of priorities ⁣Congress struck in the⁤ RHA outweigh‍ Texas’s ⁣interest in implementing its buoy barrier ⁣in the⁢ Rio Grande River,” the judge wrote. “The​ harm to‍ navigation is⁤ clearly⁣ evident from the⁣ evidence presented,⁢ while the⁣ State of Texas did not present any ⁤credible evidence that the buoy ⁢barrier as ‍installed has significantly ​curtailed illegal immigration across the ⁤Rio Grande River.”

Judge Ezra also raised⁣ concerns that ⁣Texas’s actions could further harm‍ relations between the United States and Mexico, noting that the barrier “has already placed tremendous strain” on “one of ‍the most important, dynamic, and economically impactful partnerships in the world.”

“Defendants and⁢ anyone working on their behalf are enjoined and⁣ hereby prohibited from ​building​ new or placing additional‍ buoys, blockades, or ‍structures of any kind ⁢in ⁣the Rio Grande River pending final judgment in this matter,” the order‌ stated.

Border Fending Off ‘Criminal-Cartel Invasion’

“The United States failed to‍ defend Texas’s borders, leading ‍to⁣ millions of individuals and hundreds of millions of fatal doses of fentanyl, often trafficked by transnational criminal cartels,⁣ illegally entering Texas and the US,” lawyers for the state ⁤wrote.

“Consequently,​ the State declared​ a border-security disaster and placed an approximately 1,000-foot-long buoy system in the ⁣Rio Grande to prevent people and drugs from being trafficked into the State, violating federal and Texas law. The buoys have nearly eliminated illegal crossings of people and drugs where they’ve been placed,” they added.

Lawyers for the state ⁣also argued that Texas has “clear constitutional authority to defend its territory.”

“The buoys were deployed under ​the ​Governor’s constitutional authority to defend Texas⁤ from transnational-criminal-cartel invasion,” lawyers for the state wrote. “Moving the buoys exacerbates dangers to migrants enticed to cross the border unlawfully, and ⁣to Texans harmed by human trafficking, drug smuggling, and unchecked cartel violence,” they concluded.

Mr. Abbott ‌has not yet ​commented on the latest ruling but vowed ‌Wednesday not to back​ down.



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