The US Department of Homeland Security said it detained 46,195 people in October, up from 39,501 in September and 37,048 in August.
"There are currently about 41,000 individuals in our immigration detention facilities -- typically, the number in immigration detention fluctuates between 31,000 and 34,000," DHS Secretary Jeh Johnson said in a statement yesterday.
"I have authorised US Immigration and Customs Enforcement to acquire additional detention space for single adults so that those apprehended at the border can be returned to their home countries as soon as possible," he said in his statement.
"Our borders cannot be open to illegal migration. We must, therefore, enforce the immigration laws consistent with our priorities," he said.
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Immigration officials have said that most of the new arrivals from Mexico are actually Central Americans making the arduous journey to seek work and safety in the United States -- amid poverty and a surge in gang-related violence at home.
The immigration has been central in the candidacy of Republican President-elect Donald Trump, who has vowed to build a wall along the southwestern border and make Mexico pay for it.
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