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Roughly 30 miles east of a U.S. Customs and Border Protection port of entry in the boiling hot Arizona desert, groups of military-aged men from Asia awaited rides from federal agents after completing a monthslong journey.
It was a Friday morning along a remote stretch of the U.S.-Mexico border just before 8 a.m. The temperature was already nearing 90 degrees and the sun had been steadily rising for hours already, bathing everything in its scorching heat.
It was pick-up time - everyone from the migrants to the human smugglers to the Border Patrol and the humanitarian aid workers knew it.
Like clockwork - and as printed on the tents lining the remote border outpost in different languages - pick up at this location occurs at 8 a.m., 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. daily.
All you need to do is get there and wait for a ride.
The man on the right here recalled having a cartel member point a gun at his head and demand his cell phone and money. The entire group was held up by the human smugglers on the very last leg of their journey, after already paying a fee to cross
Driving out to this remote crossing spot where the border wall abruptly ends and migrants waltz across into the U.S., DailyMail.com encountered roughly three dozen migrants who had just walked into the U.S. and were awaiting their Border Patrol-sponsored shuttle service.
The migrants started engaging when asked about how the Mexican cartels treated them as they made their journey to the border.
'They beat. Take everything, money ... food,' a man from Bangladesh told DailyMail.com of how his group was treated by the cartel human smugglers.
A group of men from India who had just recently crossed illegally by foot into the U.S. via a gap in the U.S.-Mexico borer wall near Sasabe, Arizona, await a Border Patrol transport
The man indicated that they were locked in a room overnight where there were bugs that roamed the floor, biting them.
He showed DailyMail.com his feet, which were covered in small red dots.
'They lock inside the room,' he said while revealing his feet covered in bug bites, 'then they go.'
The first group of migrants encountered by DailyMail.com was comprised of young men from Bangladesh and Nepal.
They said they plan to settle in Los Vegas, Nevada, Los Angeles, California, and other Democrat-run cities across the country that have more lenient sanctuary city policies.
A few others said they were making the trek to New York.
The group of men was awoken by DailyMail.com's truck driving out to the remote crossing point. After they awoke they shared where they are from and details about their journey, including how they were treated by the cartels they paid to get into the U.S.
A group of 18 men from Bangladesh and Nepal were first spotted by DailyMail.com asleep on the side of a remote road adjacent to the U.S.-Mexico border. The men looked exhausted and hardly any had more than a backpack
They were spotted asleep on the side of the road, looking dehydrated, exhausted and covered in dirt.
Most of the men had spent five to six months traveling to the U.S., some said.
They were awoken by the sound of the truck DailyMail.com was driving out to the frequented hole in the fence.
The remote patch of dirt on which the groups of migrants were sleeping was tens of miles from any town or area with basic structures, food or water
This man from Bangladesh showed his sore-riddled feet to DailyMail.com, apparently indicating that they were bug bites that came from a shelter they stayed in provided by the cartel. He said they were locked in
The Bangladeshis and Nepalese began in South America before hiking up through Panama and most of Central America before making it to Mexico.
Down another stretch of dirt road another group of men, this time from India, were discovered sitting in the shade of a near by cliff also waiting for a ride.
They too took the dangerous monthslong journey through Central America to the U.S., and largely had the same feedback as the first group of men.
The group from Bangladesh hardly spoke any English, but explained that they left to come to the U.S. after escaping political unrest at home
This pair from India told DailyMail.com there is 'no safety in Mexico' and that they were beaten by the cartel members who herded them through the border into the U.S.
Indian migrants in their twenties were headed for major cities like Chicago and New York
'In Mexico there is no safety,' an Indian migrant in his early twenties told DailyMail.com.
'Here is safe,' he said referencing American soil.
Upon the group's arrival to the breach in the barrier the presumably cartel-affiliated human smugglers pointed their guns at the group of Indian men and demanded their valuables, including food.
Another Indian man then spoke up, 'Give me your money, [your] mobile,' recounting what the cartel members told him after delivering them to the hole in the border fence.
Despite the turmoil they came running from, the men had never had guns pointed at their heads until arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border, they said.
Both the groups of men told DailyMail.com they were beaten by the cartel members while getting smuggled into America.
The migrant on the left was headed for New York while the man on the right for California
All of the people in the Bangladesh and Nepal group were men appearing to be between 20 and 40-years-old
At the end of the road where the border wall ends there was another group of migrants too.
This smaller group was comprised of four unaccompanied minors, a family unit of a mother, father and daughter as well as another mother-daughter group and several adult males.
These migrants came from Mexico and Guatemala.
The total of migrants spotted having just crossed this morning out in the remote Arizona desert was 36 in total.
Shortly after 8 a.m. the Border Patrol trucks could be seen crossing the distant hills approaching the breach in the border barrier.
A group of migrants from Central America stands in the shade of a humanitarian aid tent at the hole in the U.S.-Mexico border
Humanitarian aid workers were there to help the struggling families and their little ones
Just after 8 a.m. Border Patrol pulled up to the distant outpost and began loading migrants into their cars
After speaking with some humanitarian aid workers to glean basic details about the migrant group, the federal agents began loading the migrants into their cars.
Shortly after loading the dozen migrants from Central America into their all-terrain trucks, the agents began the hour-long journey across the tough roads back to the official port of entry and processing center.
On the ride back DailyMail.com once again encountered the group from Bangladesh and Nepal.
They were being loaded in to Border Patrol vans to also be shuttled to the processing center.
Again driving up to the group from India, the young men had shifted from the shade of a hill to the shade of the U.S.-Mexico border.
Unfortunately for them, the vehicles were full and they would have to wait for the next transport.
But they weren't worried, they knew they were going to get a ride.