A New Mexico couple hopes the Trump administration makes good on its promise of completing the construction of the border wall.
Mexico investigators have been finding bodies for days at a suspected narco mass grave in the state of Chihuahua.
Migrants in a makeshift encampment in Chihuahua set fire to mattresses and blankets Saturday to escape a government raid.
Migrants in Chihuahua began setting fire to mattresses and blankets in protest, a witness said, and tried to slip out of the site carrying babies and belongings.
The remains found in the Chihuahua state included some bodies, some complete skeletons and other partial remains, as well as bullet casings.
The U.S. government is asking people to avoid traveling to certain areas of the Texas-Mexico border due to security concerns.
Mexico is constructing tents to receive Mexican nationals deported under Trump's mass deportations and provide them with services to help resettle.
President Donald Trump's promises of mass deportations, which could bring batches of new arrivals fresh off the border bridges into Juárez, has Mexican law enforcement preparing to keep watch for potential trouble.
The Mexican government plans to establish nine reception areas for deportees in Mexico's six northern border states over the coming weeks.
This is the first embed given to any world news outlet by the U.S. Border Patrol since the new Trump administration took office and it's clear, they are eager to show us how well things are going. "This is as forward as you can be on the front line," Agent Orlando Rubio noted as we drove up to the border wall.
Authorities in the Mexican state of Chihuahua have uncovered 73 bodies and sets of skeletal remains in clandestine graves over the past month, highlighting the ongoing violence tied to cartel conflicts in the region.
The U.S. Embassy and Consulates in Mexico issued a travel advisory for American citizens traveling to the Mexican border state of Tamaulipas warning them over recent criminal activity at different areas on the border.