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Homeland Security names Border Patrol veteran Jason Owens to lead the agency

Owens will succeed Raul Ortiz, who is retiring after more than three decades with the agency.
PORTLAND, ME - JUNE 14: Jason Owens of the U.S. Border Parol addresses Gov. Janet Mills, U.S. Rep. Chellie Pingree, Portland officials and others during a meeting to discuss the asylum-seeker surge into Portland, and whether the state can help with the costs. Owens, who was formerly stationed in Laredo, Texas, said asylum seekers are choosing to travel from the southern U.S. border to Portland because the city has a reputation for being a welcoming community.
Jason Owens of the U.S. Border Patrol in Portland, Maine, in 2019.Ben McCann / Portland Press Herald via Getty Images file
/ Source: The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The Biden administration on Friday named U.S. Border Patrol veteran Jason Owens to lead the agency, replacing retiring chief Raul Ortiz.

In a statement announcing Owens’ promotion, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said, “Chief Owens is a talented, selfless, and inspiring leader who is dedicated to the Border Patrol’s law enforcement mission, the men and women who fulfill it, and the country that we all serve.”

“I am inspired by his commitment to the mission, and am grateful to him for his continued service in this new leadership role,” Mayorkas added.

The New York Times reported that Owens has been with the Border Patrol for more than 20 years, most recently as the head of the Del Rio division in Texas.

Ortiz said last month in a note to staff that was obtained by The Associated Press that he will leave June 30.

Ortiz managed the Border Patrol and its roughly 20,000 agents through the COVID-19 pandemic and Title 42 emergency health restrictions that began in March 2020 and allowed agents to quickly return migrants over the southern border.

He also oversaw the rollout of new policies on May 11 meant to discourage migrants from crossing illegally while opening up other legal pathways. The number of crossings has dropped, and the border has not seen the high numbers of crossings or chaos anticipated by even President Joe Biden with the end of the restrictions.