Tuesday, January 26, 2021

JOE BIDEN - FIRST, PUT OUR PARTY BASE OF ILLEGALS INTO JOBS, THEN HAND THEM AMNESTY SO THEY MAY BRING UP THE REST OF THE FAMILY AND VOTE DEM FOR MORE!

 

161 Migrants Apprehend in 4 Human Smuggling Incidents in Texas near Border

71 migrants found in a crowded mobile home near the Texas border with Mexico. (Photo: U.S. Border Patrol/Rio Grande Valley Sector)
Photo: U.S. Border Patrol/Rio Grande Valley Sector
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Rio Grande Valley Sector Border Patrol agents disrupted several human smuggling attempts over the weekend. The interdictions led to the apprehension of 161 migrants who illegally crossed the border from Mexico into Texas.

Rio Grande Valley Sector agents received a request for assistance from the Starr County Sheriff’s Office regarding a suspected human smuggling stash house operation in Garceno, Texas, late last week, according to information provided by Border Patrol officials. When the agents arrived at the mobile home, they found a large group of men, women, and children crammed inside the trailer with no personal protection equipment.

Agents determined there were 71 people crammed into the small mobile home. An immigration interview identified them as illegal immigrants from El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Mexico.

Later on January 21, Corpus Christi Station agents received a call for assistance from San Patricio County officials regarding a possible group of migrants hidden inside a moving rail grain hopper, officials reported. One of the migrants trapped inside the rail car called 911 for assistance saying they feared for their safety.

Agents responded and rescued 14 migrants from Guatemala, Honduras, and Mexico. A medical screening determined all 14 to be in good health.

That night, lost migrants activated a rescue beacon near the Rio Grande in Mission, Texas. Agents responded and found 48 people who had illegally crossed the border river. Officials stated that one of the migrants requested medical attention after injuring her ankle during her border crossing attempt. Agents arranged to transport the woman to a hospital for treatment. Doctors treated the woman and released her to Border Patrol agents.

Elsewhere, RGV Sector agents responded to a reported stash house in Hidalgo County, Texas. The agents “apprehended 28 illegal aliens” within the stash house.

In total, agents apprehended 161 migrants in the four incidents. Of those, 90 were counted as migrant rescues.

The migrants will be removed to Mexico under Title 42 Coronavirus protection protocols put in place by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. CBP officials reported that approximately 90 percent of all apprehended migrants who illegally cross the border are returned to Mexico or their country of origin — mostly within two hours of their apprehension.

“Even with the spread of the COVID-19 virus, human smugglers continue to try these brazen attempts with zero regard for the lives they endanger nor to the health of the citizens of our great nation,” officials said in a written statement.

Bob Price serves as associate editor and senior news contributor for the Breitbart Texas-Border team. He is an original member of the Breitbart Texas team. Price is a regular panelist on Fox 26 Houston’s Sunday-morning talk show, What’s Your Point? Follow him on Twitter @BobPriceBBTX, Parler @BobPrice, and Facebook.

Study: Joe Biden to Halt Nearly 9-in-10 Deportations of Illegal Aliens

Guatemalan migrants deported from the United States, queue upon their arrival at the Air Force Base in Guatemala City on January 6, 2021. - During 2020, the United States expelled 21.057 Guatemalans by air, a considerably lower number than the 54.599 people deported during 2019, so far the record of …
ORLANDO ESTRADA/AFP via Getty Images
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President Joe Biden’s executive order halting deportations for 100 days will likely keep nearly 9-in-10 illegal aliens in the United States who would have otherwise been deported, analysis finds.

The order, issued by Biden on January 20, directs the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to halt deportations of illegal aliens for 100 days except those who are terrorists or convicted of an “aggravated felony.” Also, illegal aliens who crossed the U.S.-Mexico border on or after November 1, 2020, can still be deported.

Still, the order is expected to keep most of all illegal aliens in the U.S. who would have been deported over the next 100 days.

Analysis from Center for Immigration Studies Policy Director Jessica Vaughan reveals that about 88 percent of illegal aliens deported in 2018 were not aggravated felons. This indicates that nearly 9-in-10 illegal aliens will be shielded from deportation for at least 100 days because they have yet to be convicted of an aggravated felony.

“This is a drastic and unprecedented order,” Vaughan wrote in her analysis.

“Out of all interior deportations, the number of cases classified as ‘not aggravated felons’ in 2018 was 83,804,” Vaughan notes. “This was 88 percent of all interior deportations.”

The order “means that ICE must release criminal aliens and others in custody who are not covered in these definitions” along with keeping convicted criminal illegal aliens in the U.S., Vaughan states:

This will include aliens convicted of domestic violence, sex offenses, drunk driving, theft causing loss of less than $10,000, vehicular homicide, an infinite number of misdemeanor crimes, and much more. It means that when USCIS refuses green cards or other benefits because the applications were fraudulent, that unqualified applicant will be able to stay anyway. It means that in the next 100 days, if a local police officer arrests a previously deported gang member, even one with a serious criminal history, for a new crime that is not an aggravated felony, ICE will not be able to take action to remove that gang member again. [Emphasis added]

Already, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has filed a lawsuit against Biden’s order halting deportations calling it “unlawful” and a violation of federal immigration law.

“Failure to properly enforce the law will directly and immediately endanger our citizens and law enforcement personnel,” Paxton said in a statement.

The deportation halt had become a promise to open borders groups after they successfully lobbied Biden in late 2019 and early 2020 to take up the issue. In March 2020, the open borders lobby began requesting Biden permanently halt deportations, although he has not gone that far yet.

Biden’s order could potentially serve as a boon to a caravan of Central American migrants headed to the border in the hopes of taking advantage of the new administration’s lax enforcement policies.

In a recent interview with CNN, a migrant with the caravan said Biden is “going to help all of us” by giving “us 100 days to get to the U.S.” — a direct reference to his 100-day deportation halt.

Deportations for illegal aliens is a huge cost-savings for American taxpayers, research has found. The taxpayer cost of the roughly 11 million to 22 million illegal aliens living across the U.S. totals nearly $750 billion over the course of a lifetime while each deportation costs just $10,900. This indicates that taxpayers would save about $622 billion over a lifetime if every illegal alien were deported.

John Binder is a reporter for Breitbart News. Follow him on Twitter at @JxhnBinder

Washington, D.C. (January 25, 2021) – President Biden has pledged to allow all current and future illegal aliens to remain here forever, so long as they avoid a felony conviction (except one related to drunk driving, which he would ignore). The massive bill he proposes would actually repeal many long-standing measures to ensure compliance with immigration rules. The legislation also sets in motion a push to renege on the original grand bargain of 1986 and make it legal again to hire illegal aliens.
 
The radicalism of Biden’s approach is that it rejects both enforcement first and enforcement second in favor of enforcement never. To those who want assurances that the president will at least enforce immigration laws after an amnesty, the new administration’s answer is that of Judge Smails in Caddyshack: “You’ll get nothing, and like it.”
 
But the only way such an amnesty can work as policy — and be accepted as legitimate by the public — is if it addresses the reasons that such a large illegal population developed in the first place. Otherwise, today’s amnesty simply tees up tomorrow’s even bigger amnesty.
 
 
Past amnesty proposals have acknowledged the imperative of enforcement, in words if not in deeds. The Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986, which legalized about 3 million of the 5 million illegal aliens believed to be here at the time, was a grand bargain of amnesty in exchange for promises of future enforcement, specifically of the new ban on the hiring of illegal aliens. Those promises were not kept, and within a few years the continued non-enforcement of immigration law meant that all the amnestied illegal aliens were replaced by new ones.
 
The immigration bills pushed by Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama also adopted this grand-bargain approach — amnesty for those already here in exchange for promises to enforce the law in the future.
 
This is why opposition to amnesty bills in Congress has centered on the demand for “enforcement first” instead of amnesty first. Bottom of Form
Such prerequisites would include mandatory use of the online E-Verify system to check the legal status of all new hires; a functioning entry-exit tracking system for foreign visitors, to ensure that they leave when they’re supposed to (most new illegal immigrants enter legally as visitors and then don’t leave); and full cooperation between federal immigration authorities and local law enforcement — i.e., an end to sanctuary cities.
 
The passage of the Biden immigration bill — even in a slimmed-down form — would merely guarantee continued illegal immigration in the future.
 
 
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