Jimmy (not his real name) is a former coyote or people smuggler who agreed to speak to the BBC at a location outside the capital. For 20 years he made a living taking people across Mexico, generally considered the most dangerous leg of the journey.

It is an illegal industry primarily run by Mexican organised crime groups and although Jimmy claims he did not specifically work for any of the major cartels, he acknowledges he operated with their knowledge and their blessing.

Today, he says, potential clients are finding “the price has doubled, from $12,000-13,000 per person to more like $25,000-30,000”.

“People are still getting through, though,” insists Jimmy. “It was a lot more under the CBP One app [a Biden-era legal pathway to lodge asylum requests] but maybe 40% are still getting there.”

Fewer people are leaving because “not everyone can pay” the elevated costs of the people smuggler, he adds.

Among them, Uber driver Elías Padilla.

Having worked hard and sold personal items to get the funds together, Elías simply cannot afford to risk being deported soon after arriving in the US.

Even though he knows his chances of successfully settling in the United States have diminished under Donald Trump, Elías says he has little choice but to wait – for either the current wave of ICE raids or the entire Trump presidency to pass.

Central American migrants have seen all manner of hardline policies against them over the years, he adds – both by regional governments and by Washington. With the economic outlook in Honduras still bleak, Elías thinks there is little that can hold people back for long. Not even the current crackdown.

“Trump has only postponed my plans,” he insists. “Not cancelled them.”