ICE Announces Plan to Stop ‘Fake Families’ and Child Smuggling at the Border

ICE Announces Plan to Stop ‘Fake Families’ and Child Smuggling at the Border
A group of illegal aliens walk up the road after crossing the Rio Grande from Mexico. Further up the road, they will be processed by Border Patrol and then board a bus bound for the Border Patrol processing facility in McAllen, Texas, on April 18, 2019. (Charlotte Cuthbertson/The Epoch Times)
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Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) announced Monday, April 29, that it is shifting its resources to deal with the influx of “fake families” arriving on the U.S-Mexico border.

“Fake families are being formed to cross our border and avoid detention. ICE [Homeland Security Investigations] is working with [Customs and Border Protection] to stop individuals, networks and organizations facilitating child smuggling and document fraud to illegally enter the U.S.,” ICE tweeted on Monday.

The agency stated that it is moving experts to the border to investigate child smuggling, and it will be using science data to “dismantle” the child trafficking rings employed by human smugglers working in Central American and Mexico. The announcement came on the same day as a media appearance by the agency’s acting director.

A Honduran girl, 7, stands with her family at the U.S.-Mexico border
A Honduran girl, 7, stands with her family at the U.S.-Mexico border fence near Penitas, Texas, on Feb. 22, 2018. (John Moore/Getty Images)

“What we’re currently doing is surging resources from ICE’s Homeland Security investigations to the border. We’re sending human trafficking experts, document fraud experts, forensic interviewers, victim assistance specialists, because our first and primary goal is the safety and security of these children,” said Acting ICE Director Matthew Albence during an appearance of Fox and Friends.

Family units make up a large portion of the illegal aliens apprehended at the southern border. Of all the people apprehended at the southwest border, 62 percent of them were an unaccompanied minor or claimed to be a part of a family unit. In a six-month time period, around 2,700 migrants were determined to be lying about their family unit claims.

The number of children traveling with adults who are lying about their relationship has raised concerns among immigration enforcement.

“These children are being victimized. We know they’re being trafficked, we know they’re being recycled and sent back across the border numerous times to be rented by these cartels and by these organizations to be utilized again and placed with a non-relative adult so that adult can be released because they know that we can’t hold them,” Albence continued.

A Honduran mother walks with her children
A Honduran mother walks with her children next to the U.S.-Mexico border fence as they turned themselves in to Border Patrol agents near Penitas, Texas, on Feb. 22, 2018. (John Moore/Getty Images)

The Department of Homeland Security has already begun changing policy to deal with the huge wave of “fake” children arriving at the border, with officials now fingerprinting minors that are 14 and younger. Previously, Border Patrol agents would only occasionally take photos and collect some information on children. The changes, they believe, will help them better identify children being used by human smugglers.

Radio and newspaper advertisements in Central America are encouraging locals to flee to the U.S. illegally, and telling them to bring children with them as that increases their chances of making it into the interior of the country.

By Jason Hopkins

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From The Daily Caller News Foundation

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