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Border Report – New border wall going up along busy smuggling corridor

Posted on July 16, 2025

SANTA TERESA, New Mexico (Border Report) – Construction of 7 miles of so-called secondary border wall has begun in the desert of southern New Mexico.

Exclusive Border Report video taken this week shows excavators digging trenches just east of the Santa Teresa port of entry and cranes placing sections of new 30-foot-tall steel bollard fencing. This, in an area known until very recently for smuggling activity and rescues of migrants succumbing to extreme temperatures.

The new structure will be north of an older, 18-foot-tall steel mesh fence showing the scars of cartel attacks over the years. A patchwork of welded replacement squares can be seen covering square holes in the mesh left by smugglers.

These attacks brought about U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s 2021 Fence Cutter Initiative, which prioritizes the prosecution of individuals on the U.S. side of the border and enlists the help of the Mexican government to catch perpetrators on the Mexican side.

“Transnational Criminal Organizations operating in the El Paso Sector frequently use bolt cutters, grinders, and acetylene torches to breach the border barrier, as it represents a challenge to Transnational Criminal Organizations who are organizing and executing daily illegal smuggling attempts,” CBP said in a statement.

In the three months following the start of the program, CBP identified 198 breaches that cost the federal government between $60,000 and $80,000 to repair.

The new 6-inch hollowed square bollards are much more difficult to pierce and are partially filled with concrete, a federal official told Border Report. “It tends to strip a (cartel’s) carbide saw,” the official said.

This portion of border wall construction is separate from the newly announced Anapra Wall Project. That one means to install 1.3 miles of steel bollards and anti-climb features in the back of Mount Cristo Rey in Sunland Park, N.M.

The public comment period for that project expired on July 3, though environmentalists and religious groups are still voicing opposition to its effects on wildlife and on Catholic Church faithful. The mountain has a shrine to Christ the King on its summit and hosts pilgrimages twice a year.

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