Texarkana Gazette

‘Vetting’ migrants shouldn’t make you feel safe

- Simon Hankinson

Amid all the confusion at our border, at least one question with national security and public safety implicatio­ns has gone almost entirely unexamined: We’re told that those who enter our country illegally are “vetted” before they’re released into our communitie­s, but what does this mean?

Not much. Since President Joe Biden took office, the Department of Homeland Security has released an estimated 2 million migrants into the U.S. after minimal “process- ing.” This means taking their photos and fingerprin­ts, entering (unverifiab­le) names and birth dates, running this data through U.S. law enforcemen­t and immigratio­n databases, and creating an immigratio­n file if a prior one isn’t found.

Some of those who are released get a “notice to appear” at a future immigratio­n court hearing to argue why they shouldn’t be removed from the U.S. for being here illegally. But when overwhelme­d, DHS has simply released them with a “notice to report” to their nearest Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t (ICE) office, where they can later get the “notice to appear” and start that slow legal ball rolling. In a small number of cases, ICE tracks them or asks them to check in via phone every so often.

As for “vetting,” in immigratio­n terms it should mean making sure each unknown migrant isn’t a known terrorist, and doesn’t have a criminal record, contagious disease, or prior immigratio­n violation. This is important, since those currently being released will be our neighbors for a long time, given immigratio­n court and USCIS backlogs.

However, DHS agents can only check crime and terrorism databases from the U.S. or some allies. That doesn’t include most of the countries the current wave is coming from. There aren’t many Canadians walking across the Rio Grande, but plenty of Russians and Chinese are.

In the most recent border rush, DHS released hundreds of migrants into Yuma, Arizona. Yuma Mayor Douglas Nicholls claimed that the migrants “have been vetted” and so “there’s not people that are convicted of crimes that are being released.” If that’s what DHS told him, it’s not true.

Nicholls said that the released migrants “have been vetted at least to the point where Border Patrol has issued them notice to appear papers wherever they end up living in the country,” according to the Daily Mail. He understand­s that those papers will begin an immigratio­n process that will take many years before the migrant is either given asylum or (in most cases) ordered removed from the U.S.

At current rates, the chances of ICE enforcing that order is negligible. In the meantime, we get to find out more about who they all are.

Even assuming that the rate of felony conviction­s among the released population is similar to the U.S. national average, then we’re letting in hundreds of convicts a month. But anyone can observe that a high percentage of those being caught and released at the border are young men, whose rate of criminal behavior is above average among demographi­cs everywhere.

Thanks to the 2 million migrants recently released, plus a couple million more “gotaways,” Americans must now live with thousands of unknown criminals with a significan­t chance of re-offending.

Imagine if only 5% of Biden’s released migrants have criminal records we aren’t able to discover through “vetting” before releasing them. Whether they will re-offend, and who will be hurt, will be revealed, victim by victim, over the coming decades.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States