Will Racke | Immigration and Foreign Policy Reporter

More than a half million people tried to cross the southwest border without authorization in fiscal year 2018, an increase of about 100,000 over the previous years total that was spurred by a surge in family migration from Central America.

A total of 521,090 people were either arrested or deemed inadmissible at U.S. ports of entry along the border, according to Customs and Border Protection figures released Tuesday. That compares to 415,517 in fiscal year 2017, a year that saw historically low levels of illegal immigration in the months after President Donald Trump assumed office.

More than a half million people tried to cross the southwest border without authorization in fiscal year 2018. (Image source: CBP.gov)

Since then, however, illegal immigration has risen to levels seen during the second Obama administration. The rebound is due in large part to a stunning spike in attempted crossings by so-called “family units,” nearly all of which are from three Central American countries — Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador.

Border Patrol arrested 4,836 people traveling in family units along the southwest border in October 2017, the first month of the fiscal year. By September, the last month of the fiscal year, that number had shot to 16,658, the highest ever recorded in a single month. (RELATED: Illegal Immigration By Families Hits All-Time Record In September)

The Trump administration has attributed the surge to loopholes in immigration law that prevent the government from holding adults and their children in detention together while their cases are heard in immigration court. Administration officials say the restrictions encourage parents to bring children across the border because they know they will be released for the duration of their immigration proceedings, which can take years.

Honduran migrants taking part in a new caravan heading to the US, arrive to Chiquimula, Guatemala, on October 22, 2018. - US President Donald Trump on Monday called the migrant caravan heading toward the US-Mexico border a national emergency, saying he has alerted the US border patrol and military. ORLANDO ESTRADA/AFP/Getty Images

Honduran migrants taking part in a new caravan heading to the U.S., arrive to Chiquimula, Guatemala, on Oct. 22, 2018. ORLANDO ESTRADA/AFP/Getty Images

Tuesdays border arrest figures come as a massive caravan of at least 5,000 migrants, mostly from Honduras, is making its way northward through Mexico with the aim of reaching the U.S. border. It is the second such procession this year, after a similar group marched from Central America all the way to U.S. ports of entry in April.

The Mexican government has offered to grant temporary humanitarian visas to caravan members in an effort to break up the mass of migrants into smaller groups. But the vast majority have refused to apply for asylum in Mexico, and Mexican authorities have largely allowed the migrants to continue their journey without proper documentation.

Trump administration officials say the migrants refusal to apply for asylum in Mexico suggests the vast majority are economic migrants, meaning they dont qualify for asylum protections under U.S. law.

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