Mr. President,
In Biden-Harris’s America, children disappear every day.
You won’t see their faces on any milk cartons, search parties aren’t sent for them and the Amber alert almost never sounds.
According to Justice Department’s filings, some of these children reappear years later in Emergency Departments with injuries from physical or sexual abuse. Others resurface as underage laborers, working jobs most adults won’t even take. Many are never heard from again.
These forgotten children are overlooked because they are unaccompanied migrant children.
These are the children who crossed into the United States without their families, without their moms or dads.
By February 2023, the New York Times reported the Biden-Harris administration could not reach 85,000 of the unaccompanied migrant children that had entered the United States since 2021.
Then, in August 2024, the Department of Homeland Security Office of Inspector General found the government failed to enroll 291,000 of these children in immigration proceedings over the last five years. Of those that were enrolled, 32,000 never showed up to court. Many of them are missing.
Government employees working directly with these kids began to sound the alarm.
The Biden-Harris administration responded by quietly, very quietly, suppressing attempts to save these missing children in order to avoid a politically inconvenient narrative.
And the very same Democrats and members of the media who had actually decried Trump-era immigration policies stayed silent.
The media didn’t do their job of properly pointing out wrongs, except when you have a republican president.
At least one whistleblower was actually walked off-site at a shelter for these children, for reporting that children were in danger to law enforcement.
Other whistleblowers told my office they were denied access to records that might have raised concerns about children being trafficked.
The most consistent whistleblower complaint I received was that law enforcement was not given the information needed to save missing children.
Desperate to find these kids, at least one Homeland Security agent asked a whistleblower to establish information sharing channels on imperiled children, because there was no formal channel in place for this information to be shared.
Now, we all know that denying law enforcement access to this life-saving information was part of the Biden-Harris immigration plan.
Three months into their term, the Biden-Harris administration tore up information-sharing, an agreement between Homeland Security Investigations and the officials responsible for running the Unaccompanied Children Program.
They replaced that agreement with a watered-down agreement that deleted provisions requiring sponsors to be vetted and run through certain law enforcement checks before receiving custody of a child.
Today, law enforcement has significantly less involvement in vetting sponsors—even if the sponsor is a complete stranger to the child.
This is not family reunification, as the Biden-Harris administration wants the entire country to believe.
According to government statistics, between October 2021 and September 2022, over 18,000 children were given to distant relatives or unrelated adults.
Turning over custody of a child is one of the most consequential actions a caseworker can ever take.
From there on out, every decision made for the child belongs to the sponsor—financial, housing, medical—you name it; the sponsor is in control of their decisions.
I can’t imagine having every decision critical to my survival turned over to a complete stranger, who the government hasn’t even fully vetted.
But child safety wasn’t this Administration’s priority.
Now thanks to whistleblowers, we have been provided records and disclosures that were so bad, I had to refer the information to law enforcement way back in January to try and rescue kids. But given the poor vetting, it’s much harder to find those same kids.
As illegal border crossings surged, pressure mounted from the top of the bureaucracy to process kids faster to avoid accusations of “kids in cages.”
During a conference call, Secretary Becerra of HHS admonished his employees that they weren’t moving kids out to sponsors fast enough. That’s the environment that I’m talking about, getting things done quickly, so you can’t be politically criticized like Trump was criticized.
Secretary Becerra said, “This is not the way you do an assembly line.”
Program operators knew this politically-motivated rush could have dangerous consequences, but they proceeded anyway.
One official said the quiet part out loud to a whistleblower trying to intervene to protect endangered kids.
She was told, “...We don’t get sued by traffickers.”
Now, can you believe that approach to protecting kids?
The [Biden-Harris] administration published wave after wave of field guidance meant to push kids to sponsors faster and cover up the consequences of this haste.
They removed fingerprint requirements for sponsors claiming to be parents or legal guardians, even without sufficient verification— simply this, just, I am who I say I am.
They released kids to sponsors before background checks had been completed.
They denied law enforcement access to photographs of children.
During a Senate Finance hearing, Senator Cornyn asked Secretary Becerra who the Biden-Harris administration believes is responsible for making sure these children aren’t being trafficked.
Secretary Becerra said it’s “the communities where they enter.”
So just some community, any place in the United States, to be responsible to make sure that these children are being treated [well], and not being trafficked.
I’m not sure if the Biden-Harris administration ever stopped to wonder how local law enforcement looks after a child when this administration won’t even give them a photograph of an endangered child.
I’m told law enforcement can’t.
What resulted from this administration’s disastrous policies—almost inevitably—was the systematic abuse and disappearance of migrant children.
Whistleblowers fought in vain to prevent children from going to men who sexualized them, MS-13 gang-affiliated sponsors and also sponsors who were mass applying for kids.
We had an example of where one address, in some city in this country, was used to get massive numbers of kids. Just hearing that ought to scare anyone.
One whistleblower told my office they called a sponsor only to hear a child’s agonizing screams before the line then was quickly disconnected.
Whistleblowers testified on all of this in heartbreaking detail at an oversight roundtable I led on the topic just this year in July.
I’ve lost count of the number of reports and letters sent by Congress to the Unaccompanied Migrant Children’s program actually sounding alarms that have gone unheeded, even ignored. Each highlighted program vulnerabilities, and there’s plenty of those vulnerabilities. Each made recommendations that could’ve saved lives.
I’ve been involved in this, in a bipartisan way, for a long period of time.
My decade of bipartisan oversight has revealed an Unaccompanied Migrant Children’s program in which abuse and misconduct have become routine and tolerated.
For example, in 2021, Oregon Democratic Senator Wyden and I warned of the rampant sexual abuse of unaccompanied migrant children in the care of contractors, especially Southwest Key.
Now remember, that contractors name is Southwest Key. Not a very good place to put kids.
The Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General also identified issues with Southwest Key’s self-dealing and compensation.
As part of my ongoing investigation, for months I’ve requested from Southwest Key and other contractors and grantees basic information on their care of unaccompanied children, including whether they performed background checks of their employees before they had access to these kids.
Southwest Key has failed to fully respond to this inquiry, actually thumbing their nose at the United States Congress.
Still, the government kept giving Southwest Key contracts to care for these unaccompanied migrant kids. What followed all these contracts? Do we know that the kids are safe, or not safe?
Well, a recent Justice Department lawsuit alleges a “pattern or practice of severe or pervasive sexual harassment of children in the Southwest Key’s care.”
So just think, this Justice Department has said with this contractor that there’s a “pervasive sexual harassment of children” in their care.
So, we have to ask ourselves, if we’re humanitarians, how many more children have to endure abuse before Congress finally says enough is enough?
I say it shouldn’t be even one more.
I’m offering a bill then, that’s why I’m here, that denies future contracts to bad actors who’ve been identified by the Justice Department as abusing unaccompanied migrant children.
After applying due process, those government contracts would cease until the Justice Department certifies the conditions leading to the abuse, those conditions are taken care of, they’re over.
I think this is a very commonsense [solution] that no politician, no member of the Senate – Republican or Democrat – should stand against.
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