• Known gang members among thousands crossing with illegal immigrant children

    Known gang members among thousands of illegal immigrant children storming the U.S. border and officials are now trying to silence officers from talking to the media


    'This is not a humanitarian crisis. It is a predictable, orchestrated and contrived assault on the compassionate side of Americans by her political leaders that knowingly puts minor illegal alien children at risk for purely political purposes,' said the statement released by the National Association of Former Border Patrol Officers.

    Border Patrol agents overwhelmed by a recent influx of immigrant children crossing the border illegally have been knowingly letting gang members enter the country.

    Art Del Cueto, president of the National Border Patrol Council Local 2544 in Tucson, Arizona told the National Review that officers who recognize gang tattoos on the minors are supposed to treat them like everyone else.

    For the most part, that means letting these unaccompanied children be reunited with their parents or other relatives already living in the United States.

    'It’s upsetting that a lot of them are 16 or 17 years old and a lot of them are not going to face deportation,' Cueto said.

    Signs of violence: Border patrol officers dealing with the thousands of minors crossing the U.S. border illegally have been noticing some sporting gang tattoos. They have been instructed treat them like any other minor. Above a handout photo showing a a tattoo of the MS-13 gang from 2008




    Chris Cabrera, vice president of the National Board Patrol Council Local 3307, says an officer recently told him about a known teen member of the Mara Salvatrucha transnational gang whom he was powerless to stop entering the country.

    'If he's a confirmed gang member in his own country, why are we letting him in here? ' Cabrera asked.

    The latest revelation about potentially violent minors entering the country, comes as Border Patrol agents are being told not to talk to reporters who have traveled south to cover the hordes of children crossing into the U.S.

    Assistant chief patrol Agent Eligio 'Lee' Pena sent a email to 3,000 officers telling them not to talk to journalists and that some reporters 'may try to disguise themselves'.

    The email, obtained by The Associated Press, said agents should not speak to reporters, on or off duty, without advanced permission and warned that anyone who does could be charged with a crime or disciplined administratively.




    Young faces: The pictures, taken recently, show just how many of the illegal immigrants are children - many of whom have no supervising adult. Up to 400 a day are pouring over the border

    More than 47,000 children have been apprehended at the U.S. Mexico border since the beginning of this year, and patrol officers believe the Central American media may be to blame -encouraging young people to make the trip north.

    'I've heard people come in and say, "You're going to let me go, just like you let my mother go, just like you let my sister go. You're going to let me go as well, and the government's going to take care of us,' Cabrera says. 'Until we start mandatory detentions, mandatory removals, I don't think anything is going to change. As a matter of fact, I think it's going to get worse.

    Congressman Henry Cuellar, a Texas Democrat, took shocking pictures on his camera phone of children being detained at a holding center in his state to highlight the issue plaguing the U.S. goverment.

    The sad photos show child immigrants crammed inside cages and tiny rooms at a U.S. Government border facility - further highlighting the humanitarian crisis along America's border with Mexico.

    The images were taken at a holding center in Texas which can no longer accommodate large numbers of children and mothers traveling alone with their kids, forcing the federal government to open more facilities.

    In one snap, taken during a tour of the Customs and Border Protection facility in South Texas, a large group of immigrants are locked in a wire mesh cage.



    Caged: Congressman Henry Cuellar took these shocking images to highlight how overwhelmed the US authorities are with the recent tide of illegal immigrants

    In another, tiny children run around a packed room and foil sheets – the only blankets they have – cover the concrete floors.

    Up to 40 people a time - most appearing dirty and dejected - can be seen in filling rooms only large enough for ten.

    Yesteryday, MailOnline reported that overworked border patrol officers struggling to cope with the huge influx are separating diseased child immigrants with make-shift quarantine methods - yellow evidence tape.

    Don Ray, the Executive Director of the Texas Border Sheriffs Coalition, said border guards were simply running a strip of tape down the center of the detention facility to separate the children.

    ‘The diseased kids sit on one side and the healthy children on the other,’ he said. 'Hardly the best way to go about things'.

    Mr Ray went on to describe the relocation of immigrants as akin to the displacement of people following Hurricane Katrina.

    'You can’t have an influx of people like that without having an impact,’ he said.
    Flood: Don Ray, the Executive Director of the Texas Border Sheriffs Coalition compared the situation to the displacement of people following Hurricane Katrina




    [IMG]Cheek-by-jowl: The immigrants are crammed in tiny rooms and forced to sleep on the floor with aluminium blankets as their only comfort More than 400 children a day are flooding illegally in to the U.S. and the tide of border crossings by unaccompanied children mostly from Central America is not expected to end anytime soon. It emerged Thursday that despite the influx Vice President Joe Biden believes more, not fewer, immigrants should come to America. Speaking to a National Association of Manufacturers’ crowd this week he called for a 'constant, unrelenting stream' of new immigrants — 'not dribbling (but) significant flows,' to bolster the national economy, The Hill reported. ‘We need it badly from a purely — purely economic point of view,’ Mr Biden said, The Hill reported. Later, on Twitter, he wrote: ‘The final thing we need to do together is pass immigration reform … We need it badly. -VP at manufacturing summit.' His comments come as border patrol agents are appealing to the federal government to help with the thousands of illegal children pouring across the border.

    Earlier this week, the MailOnline saw lines of children being corralled by staff at a makeshift border patrol warehouse in Nogales, Arizona being used as a central hub to process the flood of immigrants.

    There were serious concerns for the health of the 1,100 children being held at the Nogales facility after MailOnline learned paramedics were called out three times in a day.

    We witnessed a teenage girl being wheeled out of the make-shift detention warehouse on a stretcher and loaded in to a Nogales Fire Department ambulance.

    A spokesperson for the Nogales FD said: 'We were dispatched to a 911 call at the Border Patrol station to attend to a female minor who was feeling sick.

    'Depending on the evaluation of the paramedic we will make a decision as to whether the patient will require a higher level of medical care. If so we will transport the patient to a local medical hospital.'

    The spokesperson confirmed that the call out was their third of the day to the Border Patrol facility and the eighth since June 1.




    We witnessed the youngsters being processed in a yard outside the normally unused facility in an industrial area on the outskirts of the border town.

    Staff set up tents and giant fans in the 100 degree heat and large green screens were used to keep the children hidden.

    A border patrol officer manning the main gate at the U.S Border Patrol location told MailOnline that 200 extra officers had been drafted in to help.

    Local hotels were also packed out with the influx of government officials here to tackle the problem.

    The much needed response came after pictures of unaccompanied children lying on the floor of the large barren facility raised concerns of a humanitarian crisis.

    And now these latest photos out of Texas increase the urgency of the situation.

    A wave of unaccompanied child immigrants have been arriving at the giant holding center in Texas at an alarming rate.

    More than 160,000 immigrants have been apprehended in Texas' Valley sector in the first eight months of this fiscal year, eclipsing the total for all of last year.

    This figure includes more than 33,000 unaccompanied children.

    It’s believed as many as 90,000 unaccompanied children will cross the Mexican border illegally this year in total — up from an average 6,500 over years past.

    As many as 1,100 children are currently at the holding center in Nogales.


    The children are sleeping in plastic cots but about 2,000 mattresses have reportedly been ordered, and medical supplies and other basics are being shipped.

    Conditions are slowly improving, with shower facilities being added and donations of clothing being collected for the children.

    By Ashley Collman and Ryan Parry 14 June 2014 DailyMail

    Vendors are being contracted to provide the children with nutritional meals, while the Federal Emergency Management Agency will provide counseling and recreational activities.

    On Wednesday, MailOnline witnessed a large FedEx truck making a delivery to the rear of the warehouse.

    Nogales Mayor Arturo Garina insists the site is simply addressing the immediate need for shelter.

    ‘I'm very comfortable with what I saw,’ he told CNN.
    He said there are makeshift cafes and medical centers and that telephone banks and computers have been set up to process people and contact relatives.

    Unaccompanied children and partial families from Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala make up the majority of those crossing the border.

    Of the 1,200 or so crossing the Rio Grande in eastern Texas every day, up to 400 are unaccompanied children, said Rep. Henry Cuellar, who represents the district where most of the crossings occur. 'This is a humanitarian crisis,' he said.

    It’s believed many of the immigrants use rafts to cross the Rio Grande, equipped with instructions to follow the river until reaching the Border Patrol site to surrender.

    The illegal immigrants include a group of Honduran girls, some as young as 14, according to CNN.

    Many in Congress have blamed President Barack Obama for policies they claim opened the floodgate of unaccompanied child immigrants.

    According to the Houston Chronicle, several advocacy organizations have lodged complaints with Department of Homeland Security officials on behalf of more than 100 unaccompanied youths alleging mistreatment by Customs and Border Patrol agents within the past year.

    Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson testified Wednesday before a Congressional committee that the Federal Emergency Management Agency has 70 personnel dedicated full time to coordinating humanitarian relief efforts for the surge of unaccompanied children caught at the border.

    The government has resorted to using three military installations to house an overflow of child immigrants, including an Air Force base in San Antonio, Texas.



    Conspiracy: An association of former border guards has accused the government of deliberately 'orchestrating' the flood of minors for 'political reasons'

    The Obama administration is attributing the huge influx to violence in poverty stricken nations such as Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador.

    But some members of Congress say Obama's policies and a lack of enforcement are to blame.

    ‘The President has sent the message out he is not going to enforce the law,’ Rep. Steve King, an Iowa Republican whose commentary on immigration reform drew sharp criticism, told CNN. ‘That message has echoed out.’

    Critics, such as King, point to Obama's decision in 2012 to stop most deportations of young people brought to the United States as children.

    After the children at Nogales have been processed, they will be transferred to Department of Health and Human Services run facilities at Lackland Air Base in Texas or Ventura County Naval Base in California.

    The administration announced that a third facility in Fort Sill, Oklahoma, which will house up to 1,200 minors.


    U.S. law prohibits the Department of Homeland Security from immediately deporting the children if they are not from Canada or Mexico.


    Instead, the children are turned over to Department Health and Human Services supervision 'within 72 hours of DHS taking them into custody,' an official said.

    Relatives living in the U.S. are searched for and contacted and the immigrant is given a court date.
    But very few actually show up and the children often become one of the millions of undocumented immigrants.

    Last night an organization of former Border Patrol agents charged that the federal government, under the administration of President Obama, is deliberately arranging for a flood of immigrant children to arrive in America for political purposes.

    'This is not a humanitarian crisis. It is a predictable, orchestrated and contrived assault on the compassionate side of Americans by her political leaders that knowingly puts minor illegal alien children at risk for purely political purposes,' said the statement released by the National Association of Former Border Patrol Officers.
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