The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

State senator’s traffickin­g allegation unfounded

The immigrants in Atlanta were released from detention center.

- By Lautaro Grinspan lautaro.grinspan@ajc.com The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on and Report for America are partnering to add more journalist­s to cover topics important to our community. Please help us fund this important work at ajc.com/give

A group of Georgia volunteers that has helped immigrants navigate Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport since 2020 was cast as a human traffickin­g operation in social media posts by a Georgia state senator.

On Jan. 31, Sen. Colton Moore, R-Trenton, visited a room on the second floor of the Atlanta airport’s domestic terminal, where a local nonprofit assists immigrants who have been cleared to fly. He filmed himself asking questions to a volunteer about the immigrants.

In a subsequent tweet about his experience, Moore said he uncovered a “human traffickin­g operation of unimaginab­le size” and that Georgia “borders are being breached.” The post went viral. Three days later, he was interviewe­d on national television by Fox News’ Lawrence Jones III about Hartsfield-Jackson’s “hidden room.”

“Some shady business going down,” Jones said at the end of the segment.

Despite the recent surge in attention, the immigrant assistance at the Atlanta airport isn’t new. Nor does it have connection­s to human traffickin­g. Managed by the nonprofit Team Libertad, volunteers like the one filmed by Moore welcome immigrants who get dropped off at the airport by staff from Stewart Detention Center, a South Georgia immigrant jail. The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on published a profile of this group of volunteers’ work at the airport in 2021, when the nonprofit at the helm was called Casa Alterna.

The immigrants the group helps were held at Stewart after crossing the Mexico border. They are allowed to travel to join families and friends across the U.S. Volunteers help them navigate the airport and board their flights.

“We are very proud of their profession­alism,” Andrea Espinoza, program coordinato­r at Team Libertad, said of the volunteers caught on Moore’s camera. “Team Libertad is proud to offer this volunteer service and being a friendly and helpful presence in Atlanta, the city too busy to hate.”

In his tweet, Moore called the immigrants at the airport “illegal aliens.” In the video he shot, a Team Libertad volunteer called them “recently documented.”

In truth, the former Stewart detainees are unauthoriz­ed immigrants who were taken in by U.S. border authoritie­s. They are in deportatio­n proceeding­s, and are released on the condition that they attend regular check-ins with U.S. Immigratio­ns and Customs Enforcemen­t (ICE). They ultimately must show up to immigratio­n court, where they can make a case to be allowed to stay in the U.S. Because of big backlogs of cases in immigratio­n courts countrywid­e, the immigrants probably will be able to live in the country for years.

Moore did not respond to calls from The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on seeking comment.

Moore filed a complaint with the police saying he was stopped from taking a phone video by a uniformed man whom he says was affiliated with the U.S. military. On social media, he claimed that the military was guarding the migrants. Espinoza says that the uniformed man just happened to be near the room Team Libertad uses; the military service nonprofit United Service Organizati­ons has an office in that part of the airport.

Espinoza said her group does not collaborat­e with law enforcemen­t agencies.

In a statement, a Hartsfield-Jackson representa­tive confirmed that account. “At no time does the United States military provide protection or assistance,” the airport representa­tive wrote, adding that migrants never are housed at the airport and that “at no time are these operations hidden or kept secret from the public.”

In a report on the incident submitted to Gov. Brian Kemp’s office from Georgia Emergency Management and Homeland Security Agency (GEMA), it is noted that Moore’s “interpreta­tion of a room being protected by the military was a complete misunderst­anding of the situation.”

In the report, GEMA director James Stallings writes that, aside from Team Libertad, two other government offices were notified by federal immigratio­n authoritie­s of the group of migrants’ release from Stewart: the Atlanta Mayor’s office and TSA. “Neither the Office of the Governor nor his Office of Homeland Security were notified of the intended movement of these individual­s,” the report states.

It’s been a busy start to the year for Team Libertad. Espinoza said the organizati­on provided assistance to 262 immigrants released from Stewart in January, compared with 121 in December and 123 in November.

Only a small percentage of the immigrants dropped off at the airport choose to stay in Georgia.

The overwhelmi­ng majority board flights to cities across the U.S. The cost of the flights are covered by relatives or friends, who often have to pay steep, last-minute prices because immigrants are only given a few days’ notice before being released.

Despite their lack of legal status and state-issued IDs, immigrants can board flights in the U.S. because the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion (TSA) accepts alternativ­e documentat­ion, including forms and notices issued by immigratio­n authoritie­s.

A spokesman for CoreCivic, the private prison company that operates the Stewart Detention Center, deferred to ICE for answers to questions about the pace of releases. ICE did not respond to the AJC’s request for comment.

Immigrant advocates say upticks in releases from Stewart tend to take place when the detention center needs to make room for more recent border crossers. In December, U.S. Border Patrol agents processed over 225,000 people who illegally crossed the southern border, more than in any other month in the agency’s history.

Among the provisions of a proposed border deal package unveiled by the U.S. Senate on Sunday is a measure that would give presidents expanded powers to immediatel­y expel immigrants. But the bill seems poised to fail in the Republican-controlled House.

 ?? AJC FILE 2021 ?? A group of volunteers has helped immigrants navigate Hartsfield­Jackson Internatio­nal Airport since 2020. They are not part of a traffickin­g network, as state Sen. Colton Moore alleged. He also said the military was guarding the migrants, which was false.
AJC FILE 2021 A group of volunteers has helped immigrants navigate Hartsfield­Jackson Internatio­nal Airport since 2020. They are not part of a traffickin­g network, as state Sen. Colton Moore alleged. He also said the military was guarding the migrants, which was false.

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