Breitbart Texas reviewed a Monday directive to all Customs and Border Protection managers which gags them from releasing migrant apprehension statistics through social media accounts or directly to the public without the express approval of the Department of Homeland Security. The directive precludes Border Patrol managers from releasing any interim arrest statistics or stories as the decision over the potential end Title 42 enforcement now sits before the Supreme Court.
The source, not authorized to speak to the media, says the message is intended to curb routine disclosures of migrant apprehensions near the southern border. These are generally provided by Border Patrol Chief Patrol Agents via social media and comments to journalists. The unprecedented directive was circulated on Monday and took immediate effect.
👀Take a look at what the #BorderPatrol agents in El Centro Sector have been up to in the last 7 days!
— USBP Chief Patrol Agent Gregory K. Bovino (@USBPChiefELC) December 8, 2022
With just 17 days until #Xmas🎄, USBP agents are still submitting names to the naughty list📜🎅 pic.twitter.com/dHJ2KnJ6iQ
The order was sent under the title “DHS OPA guidance on social media coordination for the lifting of Title 42.” The order was later clarified to impose a ban on the direct communication with outlets or platforms regarding the release of migrant apprehension statistics without DHS approval. DHS OPA is the acronym for the Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Public Affairs.
— Chief Patrol Agent Chris T. Clem (@USBPChiefYUM) December 6, 2022
The impact of the order is already evident from the lack of routine posts on social media accounts from several Border Patrol sectors. The content typically offers weekend or weekly recaps of migrant crossing statistics and other notable enforcement actions.
Outstanding work from our Tucson Sector agents last week. Here are the statistics covering December 4 to December 10. #HonorFirst pic.twitter.com/bPeI9kRJKk
— John R. Modlin (@USBPChiefTCA) December 17, 2022
By Randy Clark