U.S. Sends Millions to Help Youths in Countries Invading it With Illegal Alien Minors
Besides getting slammed with the exorbitant cost of caring for the recent invasion of illegal immigrant minors, U.S. taxpayers are doling out $2.5 million for juvenile justice reform in the Central American countries where they are coming from.
Itâs as if the United States is a cash cow for this particular cause. The Obama administration claims that the tens of thousands of minorsâofficially coined Unaccompanied Alien Children or UAC by the governmentâare suddenly arriving en mass because theyâre fleeing violence in their country. Truth is, the three Central American nations sending the overwhelming chunk of illegal aliensâHonduras, El Salvador and Guatemalaâhave long been renowned as hotbeds of crime that long ago spread north.
The U.S. has been deeply impacted over the years. In fact, the deadliest and most feared street gang in this country, the Mara Salvatrucha (MS-13), was founded in Los Angeles by immigrants who fled El Salvadorâs civil war in the 1980s. Since then, the MS-13, well known for its violence and brutality, has spread to most major American cities, including the metro D.C. area where federal authorities say gang members operate prostitution rings using girls as young as 12 years old.
In Central America itâs quite common that children join these deadly criminal enterprises at a very young age. The Obama administration is sending money to âpromote alternatives to incarcerationâ and improve prison conditions for those who do end up in jail in Guatemala, El Salvador and/or Panama. âCorrections systems in these countries suffer from acute overcrowding and inefficiencies which contribute to poor conditions and, at worst, active criminal recruiting and leadership of criminal activities from within prisons,â according to the grant announcement posted by the government.
Uncle Samâs $2.5 million check will, among other things âimprove corrections administration and professionalismâ in these Central American countries. It will also create opportunities for âre-socializationâ of the offenders through community service, paid work or studies to learn a profession or trade and pay for legal representation. The administration justifies the investment by asserting that it will minimize the impact of international crime and illegal drugs on the United States, its citizens and partner nations.
In the meantime, the U.S. continues taking in Central American youthsâand in some cases their parentsâthat have entered the country through the Rio Grande Valley in Texas. One mainstream newspaper reports this week that thereâs no end in sight to the onslaught. âThey are now arriving at a rate of more than 35,000 a month,â the article says and the number is expected to reach up to 90,000 across the Southwest border by the end of the year. âOnce they are processed, the Border Patrol has been flying many families to other states and releasing them en masse at bust stations with notices to appear in immigration courts at their destinations,â according to the article. Could there be a bigger compromise of national security?
Judicial Watch has reported extensively on this scandal and what itâs costing American taxpayers. In fact, JW participated in a White House press call last week where senior administration officials revealed that they were asking Congress for more than $2 billion to deal with the âhumanitarian crisis.â Art Del Cueto, the president of the Tucson Border Patrol Union, told JW that many of the youths coming in are not little kids, but rather older teens with possible gang affiliations. While they gangbang in the U.S., our government keeps sending money to improve prison conditions for their brethren back home.