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AP

End of Title 42 hasn't stopped migrants' push north to US from across the Americas

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Outside of the Brownsville, Texas, bus terminal, many migrants sit and wait to take their next steps in the United States. This is usually the first stop in a long journey once they've made it into the U.S. on humanitarian parole. The federal government appears to be pleased so far with the implementation of new policies post Title 42. The Department of Homeland Security says numbers have gone down slightly since before changes in the law.

MEXICO CITY � For weeks, Solangel Contreras raced.

The Venezuelan migrant and her family of 22 trudged through the dense jungles of the Darien Gap and hopped borders across Central America.

Mexico Title 42 Immigration Asylum

A Venezuelan migrant uses an emergency blanket as cover from the rain Saturday near the banks of the Rio Grande in Matamoros, Mexico.

Mexico Title 42 Immigration Asylum

Venezuelan migrants sit along a building wall as they take cover from the rain Saturday near the banks of the Rio Grande in Matamoros, Mexico.

Mexico Title 42 Immigration Asylum

Tents are set up Saturday on the banks of the Rio Grande at a makeshift migrant camp in Matamoros, Mexico.

Mexico Title 42 Immigration Asylum

Venezuelan migrants wrapped in blankets form a circle around a pan of scrambled eggs on a rain-soaked surface Saturday near the banks of the Rio Grande in Matamoros, Mexico.





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