In the Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge in Arizona, there’s a special place where folks trek by the dozens to start their new lives in the land of opportunity.

It’s the spot where the U.S.-Mexico border fence ends, leaving a wide-open invitation for illegal immigrants, drug smugglers, human traffickers and anyone else to come and go as they please.

“Wednesday morning a group of 66 people, mostly family units, crossed the border where the fence ends east of Sasabe,” CBP Arizona posted with a 22-second clip on Twitter.

“Video shows the group approaching the fence and walking to the end. 30% of apprehensions in the #TusconSector are family units surrendering to #BorderPatrol.”

The black and white footage shows the large group slowly parading through the desert, casually walking around the fence to their new home in America. Most understand that U.S. immigration and asylum laws only require that they claim to be a family seeking asylum and they’ll be processed at a border patrol facility and released into the U.S. within 20 days, pending a hearing months or years in the future most never bother to attend.

The CBP video Wednesday is one of many posted by the agency and others this year illustrating both how the border wall effectively controls the massive groups coming across, and the growing numbers from Central America, Africa, Haiti and other places arriving to exploit the loopholes created by Congress and circumvent the legal immigration process.

A Twitter video posted by CBP San Diego earlier this month demonstrated the effectiveness of improved border barriers going up in several areas.

“Unable to scale the new primary border barrier and flee back to Mexico, two men who entered the U.S. illegally near San Diego were arrested by #BorderPatrol,” the Aug. 19 tweet read. “Barriers give agents the time they need to respond and contain illicit activity at the immediate border. @CBP”

CBP tweeted last week:

Construction crews continue work on the new border wall system along the SW border near San Luis, AZ. In partnership with @USACEHQ, CBP has constructed over 60 miles of new border wall system along the SW border since 2017 and expects to complete 450 miles by the end of 2020.

Meanwhile, the Trump administration is also revamping policies to end the “catch-and-release” of “family units” to hold families together in detention facilities until their immigration hearing and full processing.

The administration announced the change Aug. 21, Townhall reports.

“Large numbers of alien families are entering illegally across the southern border, hoping that they will be released into the interior rather than detained during their removal proceedings. Promulgating this rule and seeking termination of the FSA (Flores Settlement Agreement) are important steps towards an immigration system that is humane and operates consistently with the intent of Congress,” according to a Department of Homeland Security statement.

“The requirements help ensure that all alien children (both accompanied minors and unaccompanied alien children) in the Government’s custody are treated with dignity, respect, and special concern for their particular vulnerability as minors.”

Democrats targeted the Trump administration this summer over policies that separate children from adults they arrive at the border with when the adult poses a national security, public or safety risk, including folks with pending criminal charges.

Federal officials have also uncovered numerous instances of “child recycling” involving smugglers who rent children to migrants to pose as fake family units for quicker processing. Preliminary investigations reveal roughly a third of migrants posing as families are fraudulent.

In June, DHS Secretary Kevin McAleenan testified in the Senate Judiciary Committee that nearly 4,800 migrants presented themselves as fraudulent family units, CNSnews reports.