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For as far as the eye can see there is nothing but brown border fence, red dirt, low-lying desert shrubs and the occasional sweatshirt, water bottle or children's toy. The trash is new and fresh footprints can be seen in the dust - people were just here.
This stretch of the Arizona border near a small hamlet called Sasabe is part of the Tucson Sector of Border Patrol's map of operations, and it's one of the busiest areas in the country for crossers not wanting to be caught.
Arizona cattle rancher John Ladd told DailyMail.com the situation at the border is not just bad, 'this is the worst it's ever been.'
His family has operated a beef operation on the border since homesteading the property in the 1890s. Ladd says he must regularly must repair cut fence wire and recapture escaped cattle due to illegal migrant activity as they cross his property.
He estimates that his 16,000-acre ranch that butts up to over 10 miles of border wall has been the preferred path for an estimated at least 500,000 migrants in the last three decades after counting himself and discussing with Customs and Border Protection.
Rancher John Ladd, 68 whose family has a 127 year legacy ranching 16,000 acres on the border with Mexico speaks out about the issues facing his livelihood and to a greater extent the country regarding the cartel run people trafficking operation
And an election year executive order from the Biden-Harris administration to secure the border through 'safe and orderly pathways' has not significantly slowed the flow of migrants, Ladd told DailyMail.com.
'As soon as Biden got elected, it just opened the door. It's, you know, it's deliberate to let them in,' said the lifelong desert dweller.
Still, recent numbers from Customs and Border Protection (CBP) show that encounters have dropped along the border since the White House imposed new immigration restrictions in June, limiting the number of asylum seekers allowed into the country.
In July, there were just over 58,000 encounters, CBP data shows.
That massive number, although less than previous months, is evidence of the Mexican cartels' soaring business, Ladd told DailyMail.com.
'The cartel is making about three and a half million a day on the fees that the illegals are paying them to get in the country, and you can't get in the country without the cartel's blessing.'
And the criminal smugglers have turned the crossing of people into the U.S. into a well-run and efficient enterprise, the rancher said.
'They adapted. They were full camo,' he said. 'We don't have asylum seekers. We got run 'n gunners.'
'They have carpet shoes and wear baklavas, and they're being guided by a cell phone from the scouts.'
Some of those camo-clad cartel smugglers - also known as 'coyotes' - were spotted by DailyMail.com out at a rural stretch of the U.S.-Mexico border wall where it ends just before a Native American reservation.
Apparent cartel human smugglers 'coyotes' stand guard on the Mexico side of the U.S.-Mexico border waiting for an opportunity to drop migrants into the U.S. at an area where the massive border wall ends in rural Pima County, Arizona
A group of migrants and smugglers set up shop just yards from a hole in the border wall
Some of the camo-clad cartel smugglers - known as 'coyotes' - were spotted along a rural stretch of the U.S.-Mexico border wall where it ends just before a Native American reservation.
They were joined by a group of migrants that appeared to have set up cross right at the huge hole in the wall
They were joined by a group of migrants that appeared to have set up cross right at the huge hole in the wall where it ends just before a Native American reservation.
Aid workers were spotted filling up pre-set tents with snacks and waters.
They also checked on a Starlink wifi box, set up on the edge of the border - and civilization for that matter - to provide recent migrants with internet connection.
One worker was spotted approaching a young boy on the other side of the border where the hole before the reservation was. A coyote was close by monitoring the interaction.
The workers were from the Tucson Samaritans and Doctors Without Borders and were there to provide humanitarian aid.
Both groups denied to comment for this report.
The cartels, meanwhile, have been busy and have been warring with each other over the stretch of land surrounding Sasabe, including its lucrative crossing routes, Ladd said.
The massive hole in the border wall before the reservation can be seen across from the pre-set shelters
As DailyMail.com looked on to the migrant camps, some there watched backed
The road along the border from Sasabe, Arizona, to the end of the border wall near the reservation was dozens of miles, a perilous journey for any recent migrant crossers
He explained a conflict has been ongoing there for the past three months that has led to many deaths and buildings being burnt down.
And one man with over 20 years of experience in the Tucson Sector is saying the illicit crossings in the area are booming.
The Tucson Sector is currently the busiest in encounters and gotaways, migrants whose footprints or tracks were found but never apprehended, Art Del Cuerto, Executive Board of the National Border Patrol Council told DailyMail.com.
He said that there have been estimates of more than 2 million gotaways since Biden took office.
And the patrol workforce there is stretched thin as many agents have been assigned processing duty where they check migrants's asylum claims.
As for the June executive order, it has not done much for the reality for locals on the ground, he said.
'That's a political stunt, and it's slowed down only because, you know, we're in our summer rainy season, and it's been hot, and we get floods and thunderstorms, and so it's down a little bit.'
Clothes - including those for children - discarded by migrants on the U.S. side of the wall
Humanitarian aid workers paint a tent with a red cross at the hole in the border wall east of Sasabe
An abandoned aid tent lies dormant just yards from the U.S.-Mexico border
Ladd is not against immigration reform, though, and noted that he has sponsored the citizenship for three men himself.
'We need people to come to America to do the labor that Americans don't want to work anymore, but do it legally,' Ladd said.
'It doesn't matter if you're from Mexico or Russia, you get vetted. You come to America, and that's fine, but don't sneak in the back door and don't depend on politicians to give you amnesty.'