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CBP releases March border crossing numbers, marking lowest to date ever recorded

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CBP releases March border crossing numbers, marking lowest to date ever recorded


The latest U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) numbers show that during March, the southwest border saw the lowest number of crossings ever, with just 7,180 recorded.

“Under the leadership of President [Donald] Trump and [DHS] Secretary [Kristi] Noem, the administration has taken bold, decisive action to restore control at the border. Border Patrol agents are empowered like never before to shut down unlawful entry and protect American lives,” Pete Flores, acting CBP commissioner, said. “The message is clear: the border is closed to illegal crossings, and for those still willing to test our resolve, know this — you will be prosecuted, and you will be deported.”

March’s numbers — with 1,146 fewer crossings than in February — represent a dramatic drop compared to the monthly average of 155,000 during the Biden administration. Under former President Joe Biden, border agents frequently recorded over 7,000 border crossings per day.

TRUMP REPORTS ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT ENCOUNTERS AT HISTORIC LOWS DURING FIRST FULL MONTH IN OFFICE

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Migrants line up at a remote U.S. Border Patrol processing center after crossing the U.S.-Mexico border, Dec. 7, 2023, in Lukeville, Ariz. (John Moore/Getty Images)

The daily apprehensions along the southwest border have also fallen to about 230 per day, CBP said, which is a number the U.S. has never seen.

CBP said that under the Biden administration, there were an average of 5,100 encounters per day.

The final monthly numbers are expected to come out in the coming days.

TRUMP ADMIN ENDS DEPORTATION PROTECTIONS FOR MASSIVE NUMBER OF VENEZUELANS AMID ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION CRACKDOWN

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Migrants seeking asylum in the U.S. as they queue at El Chaparral border crossing in Tijuana, Mexico.  (Reuters/Jorge Duenes)

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt on Tuesday praised the news about the number of southwest border crossings in March.

“Thanks to President Trump’s leadership, border patrol agents are now back to doing the jobs they signed up for: securing the border, rather than serving as travel agents for illegal aliens,” she said. “The Los Angeles Times captured the Trump effect on the border with a recent article. Their headline read ‘California, Mexico border, once overwhelmed, is now nearly empty with so few migrants coming into the U.S.’ They wrote, ‘shelters that once served migrants have completely closed.’ 

“Deportations of illegal aliens who threaten the safety of the American people are also continuing at a rapid pace.”

The figures come after Trump announced earlier this month that apprehensions fell to 8,326 in February, his first full month in office, which he said is a record-setting low. The figure marks a 96% drop from the highs of the Biden administration in December 2023.

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TRUMP ADMIN ENDS DEPORTATION PROTECTIONS FOR MASSIVE NUMBER OF VENEZUELANS AMID ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION CRACKDOWN

President Donald Trump in West Palm Beach, Fla., Nov. 6, 2024. (Evan Vucci/AP)

Following the announcement, Trump defiantly declared that the border is now closed and that all those who crossed the southern border would be quickly ejected or prosecuted for crimes against the U.S.

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Trump has also signed orders ending birthright citizenship, suspending refugee admissions, ending the use of an app at the southern border to admit migrants via humanitarian parole and resuming border wall construction.

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Trump’s hard-line approach to illegal immigration was a key campaign promise and his administration has also been arresting and deporting criminal illegal migrants across the country under the leadership of Noem and border czar Tom Homan.

Fox News Digital’s Michael Dorgan and Brooke Taylor contributed to this report.



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Dallas, TX

FC Dallas ended its winless streak and one new scorer made it sweeter

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FC Dallas ended its winless streak and one new scorer made it sweeter


Petar Musa scored his 10th goal of the season, Samuel Sarver scored his first career goal in MLS, and FC Dallas beat the New York Red Bulls 2-0 on Saturday night to snap a four-game winless streak.

Dallas (4-3-4) had lost back-to-back games.

Musa gave Dallas a 1-0 lead in the 54th minute. Ran Binyamin, on the counter-attack, played an entry pass from near the top of the penalty arc to a charging Musa for a sliding first-touch finish from the right corner of the 6-yard box. The 28-year-old Musa went into the game tied with Nashville’s Sam Surridge for most goals in MLS this season.

The Red Bulls (3-5-3) are winless in five straight.

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Sarver, the 2025 MLS Next Pro MVP, headed a cross from Logan Farrington into a wide-open net to make it 2-0 in the 88th minute.

Ethan Horvath had four saves for New York.

The Red Bulls had 61% possession, but were outshot 12-7, 6-0 on target.



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Miami, FL

Winners and losers from F1’s eventful Miami Grand Prix

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Winners and losers from F1’s eventful Miami Grand Prix


F1’s decision to bring the Miami start time forward by three hours ultimately made no difference, as the expected thunderstorms hit the track in the early hours of Sunday morning but then swerved Miami Garden in the afternoon.

As it was, Miami didn’t need the weather gods to serve up an absorbing display. And while it is too early to judge the recent round of energy management tweaks, on the surface Miami provided an entertaining mix of management tactics and driver-centred wheel-to-wheel skills.

Winner: Kimi Antonelli

With every passing week, young Kimi Antonelli is convincing more and more sceptics about whether he is really ready to take the title fight all the way in what is only his sophomore F1 season as a teenager.

There is no doubt that Antonelli is still a raw diamond rather than a polished product. But he has paired his obvious talent and speed with more maturity this year and has not flinched when the pressure is on, as evidenced by the various wheel-to-wheel battles for the lead in Miami.

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Antonelli has spent the April break working on some of those chinks in his armour, like his start difficulties, though a lot of the burden is on Mercedes to simplify its procedures too, with Toto Wolff calling the team’s struggles across both cars “unacceptable” as the competition closes in on Mercedes.

But having won his last three grands prix from pole, it’s hard to argue with Antonelli being every bit the title contender that team-mate George Russell is.

Isack Hadjar, Red Bull Racing

Photo by: Clive Mason / Getty Images

It’s too early to be talking about Red Bull’s second seat curse, not after Hadjar’s impressive start to his Red Bull tenure in Melbourne, but on a weekend Max Verstappen was firing on all cylinders Hadjar has found it much harder to keep up with the mercurial Dutchman.

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Hadjar was of course desperately unlucky for his car’s floor to just be outside legal parameters in qualifying, relegating him to the back of the grid. But he was a second off Verstappen in sprint qualifying and eight tenths on Saturday, looking much more like a 2019-2025 spec second Red Bull driver that the team is hoping to have solved. His clumsy crash in the early stages of the race was entirely avoidable, too.

Has the improved Red Bull simply allowed Verstappen to push much harder and bring out the best in him, leaving Hadjar in the dust? Or does Hadjar need more time to get on top of the heavily revised RB22? Red Bull will be hoping it is the latter, with team boss Laurent Mekies playing down any concerns.

“I don’t think we are worried,” he said. “In terms of driving and in terms of rhythm, he still hasn’t got into the right rhythm. I think he would have been strong in the race, and it was strong for the little he could have shown.”

Lando Norris, McLaren, Oscar Piastri, McLaren, Zak Brown, McLaren

A 1-2 in the sprint and a 2-3 in the grand prix? McLaren would have bitten your hand off for a double podium berth after unsuccessfully chasing Mercedes over the first three rounds of the 2026 campaign.

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But a first tranche of upgrades to the MCL40, at its historically happy hunting ground around the Hard Rock Stadium, has dramatically changed the outlook of the 2026 season. Both Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri were legitimate contenders this weekend, even if they were helped by Mercedes getting its deployment strategy wrong over the sprint event, rowing it back to a more normal set-up for qualifying and the race.

The end result is that on pure speed McLaren reckons Mercedes still has the slight edge, and the Silver Arrows are introducing their first batch of upgrades in Canada. But McLaren isn’t done upgrading either, with sources suggesting its own Montreal package amounts to around 40 percent of its total car overhaul across both rounds. Watch this space.

There was little enjoyment to be derived from Sunday’s race for Lewis Hamilton, as he was in the wrong place at the wrong time when Verstappen spun ahead of him at the start and then suffered aero damage after a glancing blow from Franco Colapinto.

Hamilton estimated the time loss at half a second and it dropped him into no man’s land for the remainder of the afternoon while his team-mate Charles Leclerc was having all the fun ahead of him, mixing it up with Russell and Piastri.

Leclerc also suffered a disappointing end to his afternoon courtesy of his last-lap spin, which cost him a certain podium, and he did exceedingly well not to suffer a huge accident that would have cost him a lot more than that. But with a car that refused to turn right any longer, Leclerc decided to redraw some of Miami’s chicanes, which cost him a deserved 20-second penalty.

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Winner: Franco Colapinto

Colapinto has come in for quite a bit of flak since replacing Jack Doohan at Alpine exactly 12 months ago, not in the least from his own boss Flavio Briatore. But armed with Alpine’s latest aero upgrades and a slightly lighter chassis, Colapinto appears to cut a more confident figure aboard the A526 and that has translated into getting the better of experienced team-mate Pierre Gasly over Miami’s two qualifying sessions, something which hasn’t happened too often.

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Colapinto delayed his only pitstop until past the halfway point, propelling up as high as fourth at one point, and Leclerc’s post-race penalty eventually netted him a best-ever points finish in seventh.

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Fresh from his Buenos Aires demo run that was attended by an estimated 600,000 Argentinians, it has been a pretty good fortnight for Lionel Messi’s favourite F1 driver. Messi’s children were all sporting Mercedes gear, so perhaps they are harder to convince.

Franco Colapinto, Alpine

Photo by: Kym Illman / Getty Images

Audi has made a commendable start as a works team from a performance point of view, even if the German manufacturer’s first F1 power unit needs a bit more juice. But its endless list of reliability issues is seriously hurting any chance of keeping up in the midfield, with Nico Hulkenberg completing a grand total of seven laps across both Miami races and Gabriel Bortoleto’s weekend derailed in qualifying.

Audi has always said it is playing the long game, so we won’t judge it too harshly after four race weekends, but the team needs to be able to nail down cleaner weekends if it wants to make progress on the performance side of things and build up some semblance of momentum.

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“It was a proper character building weekend,” Hulkenberg said afterwards. “We’ve had some promising signs and the pace in the car is not bad, but obviously we need to be able to finish sessions and get the cars out there. Yeah, just a lot of headwind this weekend, kind of need to regroup, reset now, take it on the chin.

Alexander Albon, Williams

Photo by: Alastair Staley / LAT Images via Getty Images

Williams had been one of the more disappointing stories of the 2026 season thus far, but rebounded with a first pass of upgrades by taking a double points finish with Carlos Sainz and Alex Albon. Finishing a pitstop behind Colapinto’s Alpine is not a result that merits a victory parade around Grove’s high street, but it’s a first step as the team fights to both add aero performance and sheds weight off its cars, something which will take time and which can’t be done at once in a cost cap world.

Sainz summed it up best afterwards: “It’s not where we want to be, even if it feels for everyone a bit of a relief. Getting two cars in the points on merit is definitely a good step, but we need to keep pushing because it’s still not where we expected to be at the end of last year.”

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Photos from Miami GP – Sunday

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Rain at the Hard Rock Stadium


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Lewis Hamilton, Ferrari


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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George Russell, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Oliver Bearman, Haas F1 Team


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Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Frederic Vasseur, Ferrari


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Franco Colapinto, Alpine


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Nico Hülkenberg, Audi F1 Team


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Carlos Sainz, Williams


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Lando Norris, McLaren


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Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Rafael Nadal and Jon Rahm visit the Aston Martin F1 Team garage.


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Cam'ron with the Audi F1 Team R26 on the grid.


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Fernando Alonso, Aston Martin Racing


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes, Charles Leclerc, Ferrari, Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes, Charles Leclerc, Ferrari, Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing


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Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes, Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Charles Leclerc, Ferrari, Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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George Russell, Mercedes, Oscar Piastri, McLaren


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Charles Leclerc, Ferrari, Oscar Piastri, McLaren


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Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Charles Leclerc, Ferrari, George Russell, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Isack Hadjar, Red Bull Racing


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Liam Lawson, Racing Bulls


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Pierre Gasly, Alpine


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Pierre Gasly, Alpine


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Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Pierre Gasly, Alpine


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Charles Leclerc, Ferrari, Lando Norris, McLaren


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Liam Lawson, Racing Bulls


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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George Russell, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Franco Colapinto, Alpine


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Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Lando Norris, McLaren


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Esteban Ocon, Haas F1 Team


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing, Oscar Piastri, McLaren


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Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing, Oscar Piastri, McLaren


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Charles Leclerc, Ferrari, George Russell, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Rafael Nadal waves the chequered flag for Race winner Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


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Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Andrea Kimi Antonelli celebrates after winning


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes, Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing


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Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Lando Norris, McLaren; Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Lando Norris, McLaren


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes, Lando Norris, McLaren, Oscar Piastri, McLaren


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Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes, Oscar Piastri, McLaren, Lando Norris, McLaren


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes, Toto Wolff, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


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Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Atlanta, GA

Mariners claim LHP José Suarez off waivers from Atlanta

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Mariners claim LHP José Suarez off waivers from Atlanta


The Mariners, suddenly drawing from their depth a month into the season, made a waiver claim today, picking up lefty José Suarez from Atlanta.

Mariners fans likely remember Suarez from his lengthy Angels tenure, from the time he signed with the Angels as a free agent out of Venezuela to 2024. Prior to the 2025 season, the Angels traded him to Atlanta in exchange for injury-prone pitcher Ian Anderson (later DFA’d by the Angels and re-claimed by Atlanta). Atlanta transitioned the short king (listed 5’10”) to the bullpen and edited his pitch mix, dropping his sweeper and tweaking his slider to be shorter and more of a traditional gyro slider, resulting in more whiffs on the pitch.

Command remains an issue for Suarez, something that’s persisted since his days as an Angel. As a top-100 prospect almost a decade ago, Suarez seemed slated to anchor the heart of Anaheim’s rotation. Instead, the classic control artist trap befell him. Lacking the velo (low-90s heat) or fastball traits to miss bats easily, and having more middling results on his changeup and breaking ball which can cut through Triple-A hitters, Suarez has had to nibble the edges and has seen his walk rate swell as a big leaguer in efforts to avoid barrels. Those issues, along with health troubles, saw him faded from the Angels’ plans.

Although he had a solid first season as a Brave, this year has been a struggle, leading to much sturm und drang amongst the Braves fanbase, who are all too happy to see Suarez go. As for how he fits in the Mariners bullpen, that’s a bit of a puzzle; the Mariners have a third lefty (with his own command issues, even) in Josh Simpson, although Simpson has options, where Suarez does not.

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However, the Mariners are well-familiar with Suarez, having seen him for so many years in the AL West, so there must be something there the pitching brain trust hopes to unlock. The other bonus Suarez brings is length; as a former starter, he can cover multiple innings if necessary, which it’s been more often than not lately as three-fifths of the Mariners rotation continue to turn in shorter outings. By his dint of a changeup-first offspeed repertoire, Suarez is somewhat more evenly split in his performance against hitters by handedness, instead of a traditional lefty specialist.

In a corresponding move, OF Rhylan Thomas was designated for assignment.



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