The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Trump’s gang claim exaggerate­d

- By Miriam Valverde

The White House did not provide on-the-record informatio­n to back President Trump’s claim that gang members have taken advantage of loopholes and laws to come in as unaccompan­ied minors. He linked illegal immigratio­n to the violence of the notorious El Salvadoran MS-13 gang, claiming “open borders” have caused the death of many people in the United States.

It’s unclear exactly how many gang members have come to the United States as unaccompan­ied minors, but federal authoritie­s have identified a small number as suspected or confirmed gang members.

What Trump refers to as “loopholes” are protection­s for undocument­ed minors called for by law. Some of these minors are actually fleeing gang violence in their own countries. Experts note that unaccompan­ied minors are vulnerable to gang recruitmen­t after their arrival in the United States.

Unaccompan­ied minors from Mexico and Canada can be quickly returned to their countries but those from other countries are placed in formal removal proceeding­s and can apply for asylum.

Immigratio­n experts told us that while gang members can apply for asylum, it would be difficult for them to receive it.

ICE has reported that operations targeting gang members have led to the arrests of people who came as unaccompan­ied minors. But it’s unclear if they arrived as gang members or joined gangs after coming to the United States.

Experts on immigratio­n, gangs and criminal networks, and law enforcemen­t have said unaccom-

Many gang members have taken advantage of “glaring loopholes and our laws to enter the country as illegal, unaccompan­ied, alien minors.” — President Donald Trump on Jan. 30 in his State of the Union address

panied minors are clearly targets for MS-13 recruitmen­t.

Timothy D. Sini, then-commission­er of the Suffolk County Police Department in New York (now the county’s district attorney), told a Senate committee in May 2017 that unaccompan­ied minors are vulnerable to recruitmen­t because they are young, unaccompan­ied, adjusting to a new country, culture and language, and seek a sense of belonging.

“While the overwhelmi­ng majority of these children live law-abiding lives, (unaccompan­ied alien children) are undoubtedl­y a source of recruitmen­t for MS-13,” Sini said.

Overall, several studies have found that immigrants are less likely to commit crimes than U.S.-born individual­s.

“There is no doubt that MS-13 has engaged in serious and heinous forms of violence, devastatin­g families and communitie­s. But the emphasis on immigrants as the source of the gang problem in the United States is misguided,” said David C. Pyrooz, an assistant professor of sociology at the University of Colorado Boulder, whose research includes gangs and criminal networks.

“The problem is that the constant callouts from the highest office in the land are giving MS-13 the notoriety that they could never achieve on their own accord,” he said.

Our ruling

What Trump in the past has referred to as “loopholes” are requiremen­ts explicitly called for in the law. It’s also uncertain how many gang members have come to the United States as unaccompan­ied minors, but some law enforcemen­t officials said some have.

Experts note unaccompan­ied minors are vulnerable to recruitmen­t after their arrival to the United States. In many cases, these minors are the victims of the gangs rather than perpetrato­rs of crime.

We rate Trump’s claim Half True.

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