SAN LUIS, Ariz.—A tangled coil of razor wire marks the end of a segment of the border wall between San Luis, Arizona, and Mexico, but it’s just the beginning for illegal migrants entering the city day and night.
Separating two parallel wall sections with 30-foot-high steel bollards is a narrow stretch of dirt road coined “no man’s land” by law enforcement.
Within this humanitarian limbo are empty water bottles, cans of food, and old clothing, things no longer of any use or value to those crossing the border.
According to those trying the stem the human tide, they are all signs of a worsening illegal immigration crisis in San Luis….