HR-35-119
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary.
Sponsored by Juan Ciscomani (R-AZ)
What it does
This bill would create new federal criminal offenses for operating a motor vehicle while fleeing from a U.S. Border Patrol agent — or a law enforcement officer assisting or under Border Patrol command — within 100 miles of the U.S. border. It would establish mandatory minimum prison sentences when the offense results in death or serious bodily injury. Non-U.S. nationals convicted of or admitting to the offense would be barred from admission, made deportable, and ineligible for immigration relief including asylum.
Who benefits
U.S. Border Patrol agents and other law enforcement officers working near the border, who would gain stronger legal deterrents against vehicle-based flight. Communities within 100 miles of the border that may benefit from reduced high-speed vehicle pursuits. Families of officers injured or killed in pursuit-related incidents. Federal prosecutors, who would gain a dedicated statutory tool for these cases rather than relying on existing general statutes.
Who is hurt
Individuals — including U.S. citizens — convicted under the new offense who would face mandatory minimum sentences, reducing judicial discretion in sentencing. Non-U.S. nationals convicted under the bill, who would face permanent immigration consequences including deportation and asylum ineligibility, even for a first offense. Defense attorneys and civil liberties advocates who argue mandatory minimums limit individualized justice. Asylum seekers who may be fleeing dangerous situations and whose immigration relief options would be foreclosed upon conviction. Residents within the 100-mile border zone who may be subject to the law's reach in ambiguous circumstances.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Border Patrol agents face a documented and dangerous pattern of suspects using vehicles as weapons or tools of escape, and that existing federal law lacks a targeted statute to deter and punish this specific conduct. They contend that mandatory minimums for offenses resulting in death or serious bodily injury are proportionate and send a clear deterrent signal, and that stripping immigration relief from those who endanger officers' lives is a reasonable consequence that protects both agents and the public in border communities.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that mandatory minimum sentences remove judicial discretion and have historically produced disproportionate outcomes, particularly for first-time or low-level offenders — a concern reinforced by decades of federal sentencing data. They contend that automatically barring asylum eligibility for all convicted individuals, regardless of the circumstances of flight, could violate U.S. obligations under international refugee law and may sweep in individuals fleeing genuine persecution who panicked at a checkpoint. Critics also note that the 100-mile zone already encompasses roughly two-thirds of the U.S. population, raising questions about the law's broad geographic reach.