Technology

Two Migrants Detained After Dressing Up As Construction Workers To Enter U.S. Through Border Construction Site

February 02, 2026 5 min read views
Two Migrants Detained After Dressing Up As Construction Workers To Enter U.S. Through Border Construction Site
Texas Halts State Border Wall Funding After Completing Just 8%

Two migrants were detained after dressing up as construction workers to enter the U.S. through a construction site at the border, according to a new report.

Border Report noted that the episode took place in El Paso, close to the Paso Del Norte Port of Entry. The men in question are of Mexican and Ecuadorian nationality. They attempted to go unnoticed through the site but were spotted by law enforcement agents and detained.

"These construction zones will continue to be heavily monitored by our Border Patrol agents and unlawful entry will not be tolerated," El Paso Sector Chief Patrol Agent Jesse D. Munoz said in a statement following the detentions.

"Individuals attempting to enter the United States unlawfully in construction zones or anywhere in the El Paso Sector are subject to immediate detection, prosecution and removal," he added.

Migrants have been resorting to different methods to enter the U.S. as the Trump administration continues its crackdown at the border and inside the country.

Last week a man from Texas was sentenced to almost three years in prison for using a cross-border tunnel to smuggle migrants.

The man in question, 20-year-old Oscar Ivan Carrillo, worked with other co-conspirators to create tunnels connecting to a storm drain.

He and others guided migrants through the tunnel to reach El Paso, from where a box truck with a trap door drove over a manhole cover, according to Border Report. Migrants would then climb out the tunnel and through the trap door without being detected.

The tunnel was found in January 2025. Carillo was named in a four-count indictment in April and arrested in June. In November he pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to use a border tunnel and has now been sentenced to 33 months in prison.

Authorities have found several tunnels throughout the years, and the Department of Homeland Security began in November the process to allocate $100 million to locate and destroy such infrastructure.

Authorities noted it is designed to "provide continuous detection capabilities in high-risk areas," including finding tunnels and detecting where they cross the border.

Agents added that the Persistent Surveillance and Detection System (PDS) can also be used to "forecast the trajectory of a detected tunnel to the suspected entrance on the Mexican or Canadian side of the border, and to estimate the subsurface path to the exit point on the U.S. side of the border."

The contract is set to help expand operations in California and different points in the southwest border. The project is set to end on December 31, 2026.

Related
  • Argentine President Rejects Report Claiming The Country Will Receive U.S. Deportees From Third Countries Javier Milei
  • Stephen Miller Labels U.S. Asylum System a 'Multibillion Dollar Fraudulent Industry' Designed to Delay Removals White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller

© 2025 Latin Times. All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission.

Tags: Migrants, Southern Border, Immigration