<P> Overall, there were 1,078,168 apprehensions made in the first year of Operation Wetback, with 170,000 being rounded up from May to July 1954 . In addition, many illegal immigrants fled to Mexico fearing arrest; over half a million from Texas alone . The total number of apprehensions would fall to just 242,608 in 1955, and would continuously decline by year until 1962, when there was a slight rise in apprehended workers . Despite the decline in apprehensions, the total number of Border Patrol agents more than doubled to 1,692 by 1962, and an additional plane was also added to the force . </P> <P> During the entirety of the Operation, border recruitment of illegal workers by American growers continued due largely to the low cost of illegal labor, and the desire of growers to avoid the bureaucratic obstacles of the Bracero program . The continuation of illegal immigration despite the efforts of Operation Wetback was largely responsible for the failure of the program . </P> <P> The program resulted in a more permanent, strategic border control presence along the Mexico - United States border . </P> <P> The name "wetback" was a disparaging term applied to illegal entrants who supposedly snuck into the U.S. by swimming the Rio Grande . It became a derogatory term applied generally to Mexican laborers, including those who were legal residents . One of the biggest problems caused by the program for the deportees was sending them to unfamiliar parts of Mexico, where they would struggle to find their way home or to continue to support their families . More than 25% of apprehended Mexicans were returned to Veracruz on cargo ships, while others were transported by land to southern cities in Mexico . Those apprehended were often deported without receiving the opportunity to recover their property in the United States, or to contact their families (at least, for the time being). They were often stranded without any food or employment when they were released in Mexico . Deported Mexicans sometimes faced extreme conditions in their country; 88 deported workers died in the 112 ° F (44 ° C) heat in July 1955 . Another issue was repeated illegal border crossings by those who had been previously deported; from 1960 through 1961, repeaters accounted for 20% of the total deportees . Certain U.S. Border Patrol agents practiced shaving heads to mark repeat offenders who would attempt to reenter the United States . There were also reports of beating and jailing chronically offending illegal immigrants before deporting them . While most complaints concerning deportation were undocumented, there were more than 11,000 formal complaints from documented bracero workers from 1954 through 1964 . </P>

Which of the following was true of the justice department during the 1920s