East Bay Times

Border agents with bigoted posts received little discipline

- By Andrea Castillo

“CBP’s failure to prevent these violent and offensive statements by its own agents or impose adequate discipline creates a serious risk that this behavior will continue. CBP must take immediate steps to reform its disciplina­ry processes, strengthen social media policies and training, and address longstandi­ng issues of poor morale within its ranks.” — Committee Chairwoman Carolyn Maloney

The vast majority of Customs and Border Protection agents who engaged in secretive social media groups that featured violent, bigoted posts against migrants and members of Congress ultimately received significan­tly reduced discipline measures, according to a report released by the U.S. House of Representa­tives.

Agency officials launched an internal investigat­ion into 135 employees for “inappropri­ate social media activity” and determined that 60 agents were subject to discipline. Among those, two were fired, 43 were suspended without pay, 12 received letters of reprimand, and three were issued alternativ­e disciplina­ry actions, such as a suspension without pay, the report released Monday stated.

Ten other employees retired before a final misconduct determinat­ion was made. Eleven employees not subject to discipline received other “non-disciplina­ry actions,” according to the report, such as letters of caution.

The vast majority of the agents who committed misconduct, including those who made degrading and threatenin­g comments about migrants, were allowed to continue working with migrants, according to the report.

Eighteen agents whom Customs and Border Protection’s discipline review board recommende­d removing from their positions had their discipline reduced to suspension­s, according to the report. One proposed removal was reduced to a letter of reprimand. Another became an “oral admonishme­nt.”

The report contains findings from an investigat­ion launched in 2019 by the Committee on Oversight and Reform following media reports about a secret Facebook group in which members of the agency used dehumanizi­ng and derogatory language toward Latina members of Congress and deceased migrants.

Customs and Border Protection, which oversees the Border Patrol, began producing unredacted documents this past February

after the Trump administra­tion obstructed the investigat­ion for more than a year, the report states. Documents showed the agency was aware of inappropri­ate Facebook posts three years before they were publicized in news outlets.

The most prominent Facebook group, known as “I’m 10-15” — the code used by Border Patrol for migrants in custody — was first reported on by ProPublica, and once had 9,500 members. The group’s vulgar posts included an illustrati­on of

Democratic New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez being sexually assaulted by President Trump and others that mocked migrants who drowned in the Rio Grande.

Committee Chairwoman Carolyn Maloney said in a statement that she was deeply troubled by the findings.

“CBP’s failure to prevent these violent and offensive statements by its own agents or impose adequate discipline creates a serious risk that this behavior will continue,” she said. “CBP must take immediate steps to reform its disciplina­ry processes, strengthen social media policies and training, and address longstandi­ng issues of poor morale within its ranks.”

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