An alleged high-level cartel leader who was arrested by Mexican authorities following a 2020 shootout on the streets of downtown Tijuana has been extradited to San Diego, where he is facing a
Officials said the fire, which had spread to more than 500 acres by Thursday night, was miles away from threatening any homes or buildings.
People are considering whether to apply for permission to settle in Mexico, return home, or wait to see what Trump comes up with next.
Un presunto líder de alto nivel del cartel que fue arrestado por las autoridades mexicanas tras un tiroteo en 2020 en las calles del centro de Tijuana ha sido extraditado a San Diego, donde enfrenta una acusación federal por conspiración de narcotráfico.
With the imminent threat of mass deportations from the United States, Mexican border cities are bracing for an unprecedented influx of arrivals. Across the border from California, the Mexican city of Tijuana receives around 40 percent of all deportees from the U.
Hundreds of thousands of migrants lost scheduled appointments after CBP One app was disabled, creating uncertainty at the US-Mexico border.
City leaders have plans for a 10,000-bed shelter, but haven’t provided any details regarding where it will be or when it will open.
CBS 8 spoke with Cal Fire San Diego on how crews battle fires that happen on the Mexico side of the U.S.-Mexico border.
U.S. officials say the Pentagon will begin deploying as many as 1,500 active duty troops to help secure the southern border in the coming days.
Mexico erected sprawling tents on the United States border as it braced for the effects of Donald Trump’s mass deportation drive. In an empty lot in Ciudad Juarez, which neighbours Texas, cranes lifted metal frames for tent shelters.
PIEDRAS NEGRAS/TIJUANA, Mexico - After Honduran migrant Alex Diaz' U.S. asylum appointment was canceled following Donald Trump's immigration and border crackdown, the 23-year-old former bus driver began considering what he had been determined to avoid: entering the United States illegally.