ICE identifies hundreds of migrants allegedly lying about their family status

By Jason Hopkins

The United States government identified hundreds of migrants allegedly falsely claiming familial status and numerous other migrant adults attempting to pose as minors.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) in the El Paso area have identified 238 fraudulent families, 50 adults falsely claiming to be minors, and have seized hundreds of documents attempting to support these migrants’ claims, according to an ICE statement released Thursday.

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The program identified an enormous amount of fraud by illegal migrants seemingly hoping to take advantage of U.S. immigration laws.

ICE’s Homeland Security Investigations, in conjunction with CBP and Border Patrol officials, in April launched the Family Fraud Initiative in El Paso with the goal of identifying “individuals fraudulently presenting themselves as families when making an asylum claim in order to be released into the United States.”

The program identified an enormous amount of fraud by illegal migrants seemingly hoping to take advantage of U.S. immigration laws, and ultimately resulted in more than 350 people being federal prosecuted for making false statements, human smuggling, illegal re-entry into the U.S. after being deported, conspiracy and other crimes.

The Family Fraud Initiative also identified a massive child smuggling operation run by transnational criminal organizations. Investigations indicate these criminal organizations entered into agreements with biological parents, who allow their children to be handed over to unrelated adults so they can falsely pose as a family unit to American officials. Ages of the children have ranged from 16 years to as young as four months.

“These children are being dangerously used as pawns by criminals to take advantage of loopholes in our immigration laws and avoid being detained by U.S. immigration authorities,” said Jack P. Staton, special agent in charge of HSI El Paso. “HSI and Border Patrol will continue to protect children from being smuggled, as well as aggressively target, identify and stop criminal organizations from generating false documents and exploiting innocent children.”

ICE and Border Patrol have so far transferred 19 children to Health and Human Services, removing them from such dangerous activity.

Leaders within the Department of Homeland Security have long argued that the country’s immigration laws create an incentive for foreign nationals to try and emigrate to the U.S. as a family unit. Since families with children cannot be detained for longer than 20 days, migrant adults benefit if they bring a related minor with them. If they do so, they believe they will likely be released into the interior of the U.S. before their asylum claims can be adjudicated.

Communities across Central America are aware of this loophole. In fact, numerous migrants who have reached the U.S.-Mexico border say they’ve been explicitly told to bring a child with them if they want make it past border enforcement. For many migrants, that means trying to pass off an unrelated child as one of their own.

The Trump administration — amid its overall goal to crackdown on illegal immigration — has ramped up efforts to weed out fraudulently families. Border Patrol agents will soon dramatically expand DNA testing of illegal migrants at the border. Agents already implemented a DNA testing pilot program that verified familial status.

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