The Palm Beach Post

Hungary passport fraud lets dozens slip into U.S.

Officials: Criminals gained entry via 2011 program.

- By John Hudson and Andras Petho Washington Post

WASHINGTON — U.S. officials have uncovered a fraud scheme that has allowed foreign nationals to enter the United States under false identities, a troubling security breach resulting from a vulnerabil­ity in Hungary’s passport system, authoritie­s say.

About 700 non-Hungarians have fraudulent­ly obtained authentic Hungarian passports and assumed the iden- tities of the original passport holders, according to a DHS document obtained by The Washington Post.

Of that group, at least 85 attempted to travel to the United States, and 65 success- fully entered through the U.S. visa waiver program. As of October, 30 remained in the country despite DHS efforts to find and deport them.

U.S. authoritie­s declined to say why these individual­s illegally entered the United States or how many remain at large. But experts said the fraudulent use of authentic passports poses a serious threat to the United States and other countries.

“The most obvious risk here is that people are coming to the United States who have a reason to disguise their identity,” said Stewart Baker, a former senior DHS official who dealt with transnatio­nal threats in Europe and the Middle East.

“Common reasons for doing this are drug smug- gling, organized crime or ille- gal immigratio­n,” he added.

“The most troubling rea- sons would be a well-organized terrorist organizati­on like ISIS or al-Qaida might purchase these documents ... or the Russian spies we kicked out might fly to Ukraine, buy a Hungarian passport and fly back to the U.S.”

DHS officials say they believe criminals obtained the authentic passports by exploiting a Hungarian government program that allows ethnic Hungarians who live outside the country to obtain citizenshi­p in an expedited manner.

 ?? AKOS STILLER / BLOOMBERG ?? Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban at the opening session of the national parliament in Budapest, May 8. Orban is anti-immigrant and has endorsed U.S. President Donald Trump.
AKOS STILLER / BLOOMBERG Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban at the opening session of the national parliament in Budapest, May 8. Orban is anti-immigrant and has endorsed U.S. President Donald Trump.

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