Texas Border Volunteer Group Reports Sharp Decline in Border Crossings

Texas rancher says illegal border crossings have slowed significantly, with fewer encounters reported over the past year.

BROOKS COUNTY, Texas (RFD News) — A South Texas rancher says illegal border crossings have slowed significantly, with far fewer encounters reported over the past year. RFD News correspondent Frank McCaffrey spoke with Dr. Mike Vickers, a Brooks County rancher who has led a border volunteer group for two decades, about what he is seeing on the ground.

Vickers says activity has dropped sharply, with only a couple of incidents reported recently.

“We’ve had two situations where we saw one single person last Thursday coming through, and the Border Patrol response was incredible. I sent the army out here to catch him. And then about three weeks ago, we had six Chinese people come through, and they caught those six over at the rest area, right across from my fence, so, anyway, those are the only two situations in over a year under Trump that we’ve had on private property.”

He credits increased enforcement efforts, including support from Texas Governor Greg Abbott, for helping reduce traffic in the region.

“We have the DPS brush crews come out and train on my property right here where we’re sitting and they bring their dogs or track dogs, they bring their drones and nobody gets away and when they catch them, we file criminal trespassing charges on them and they go to a detention center in Jim Hogg County over in Hebronville.”

While activity has slowed, Vickers continues operating his volunteer patrols across a wide stretch of South Texas ranchland. Things have slowed down significantly for South Texas ranchers when it comes to immigration traffic, but Dr. Vickers still runs his border operation, even though business isn’t what it used to be.

Vickers says his team covers large, remote areas where activity can still occur.

“Well, we cover a big area. This last border volunteer operation, we were on a property between Hebronville and Zapata, and that’s about a 60-mile stretch there, and it’s all big ranch country. You can drive all the way from Hebronville to Zapata and see very few buildings because the few ranchers that live in that area are off the highway. There are some drug dealers coming through.”

He adds that while drug trafficking has long been an issue in the region, it has also declined.

“But, it’s down considerably. I mean, I’d say maybe even once a month, we might see evidence that some backpackers are coming through.”

Frank McCaffrey reporting for RFD News.

Related Stories
RealAg Radio’s Shaun Haney discusses the DOJ investigation into U.S. beef packers, concerns about cattle pricing, and ongoing trade and animal health issues affecting producers.
Mobile unit supports first responders with equipment and hands-on training
Strong demand for U.S. beef in Mexico is boosting exports, with buyers seeking both variety meats and high-quality cuts like Prime and Choice ribeye.
Rep. Dusty Johnson of South Dakota joined us to discuss rising input costs, proposed fertilizer legislation, and potential support for farmers navigating tight margins.
As AI-driven data centers expand in rural South Texas, local officials and economists debate water use, farmland impacts, and the balance between technology growth and agriculture preservation.
As federal policy shifts toward greater tribal sovereignty, farmers and ranchers (and their legal counsel) must prioritize clear, written contracts and stay engaged with state legislative developments and tribal council updates.

RFD NEWS Correspondent Frank McCaffrey covers news from Texas, in the US-Mexico border region. He has provided in-depth coverage of immigration, the 2021 Texas freeze, the arrival of the New World screwworm, and Mexico’s water debt owed under a 1944 treaty.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

Mexico has fallen behind by several hundred thousand acre-feet in required water deliveries to the United States, a shortfall that has had devastating consequences across the Rio Grande Valley.
The changing political climate in America is leading to a drop in migrant crossings near the U.S.-Mexico border, where ranchers like Dr. Mike Vickers say they witnessed horrors from death to child trafficking.
RFD NEWS correspondent Frank McCaffrey recently spoke with Dr. Mike Vickers, a South Texas rancher, who says illegal border crossings have dramatically declined in the last year.
Nearly everyone in the South Texas ag community appears extremely worried about the potential of a New World screwworm epidemic, according to a local veterinarian. RFD NEWS Correspondent Frank McCaffrey reports.
RFD NEWS Correspondent Frank McCaffrey speaks with Texas’s Sen. Ted Cruz and Rep. Vicente Gonzalez about USMCA renegotiation and its impact on U.S.–Mexico agriculture trade.
RFD News correspondent Frank McCaffrey reports from Texas on the ongoing water dispute and its implications for U.S. farmers.