42 arrested at border under Biden on terror watch list: DHS data

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42 arrested at border under Biden on terror watch list: DHS data
by Anna Giaritelli, Homeland Security Reporter |
| April 19, 2022 12:40 PM


Forty-two people on the U.S. government’s terror watch list have been arrested attempting to enter the United States illegally since President Joe Biden took office, according to federal data obtained by the Washington Examiner.

The 42 arrests happened across the country, not just on the southern border, and include people who tried to enter the U.S. by illegally crossing the border, as opposed to coming through a port of entry.

“Since January 20, 2021, the U.S. Border Patrol and the Office of Field Operations has arrested 42 subjects who were on the terror watchlist and attempted to enter the United States illegally,” the DHS wrote in response to a recent congressional inquiry. “These numbers are inclusive of anyone who may be on the No-Fly List.”

Twenty-three of the 42 arrests were made between Jan. 20, 2021, and Dec. 27, 2021, specifically between ports of entry at the southern border, according to a report from Fox News that only examined Border Patrol arrests. The other 19 arrests happened when people being inspected at the border crossings were flagged.



The 42 arrests do not include those who are on the terror watch list but evaded law enforcement at the border and made it into the country without being detected. Large numbers of migrants successfully elude authorities — the Border Patrol is aware of instances in March in which 62,000 non citizens were observed illegally entering the country, but agents were unable to apprehend them.

Last summer, recently retired Border Patrol Chief Rodney Scott told agents in his farewell address that the agency was encountering people on the terror watch list “at a level we have never seen before.”

Non citizens who are apprehended for illegal entry at the border and at land ports of entry are screened against the Terrorism Screening Center’s Terrorist Screening Database. The database lists people who have concrete affiliations with terrorist organizations and have carried out or plan to carry out terrorism, as well as people suspected of the same activities. The center comprises multiple federal agencies, while the terror watch list is overseen by the FBI.

The number of terror watch list arrests by the Border Patrol is not published online, but individual arrests are normally shared through the CBP's news releases on its website. The CBP stopped disclosing them in 2021 after publishing two reports that resulted in four arrests.

House Republicans visiting the border in El Paso, Texas, in March 2021 said border authorities had told them that people on the terror watch list "are now starting to exploit the southern border" as a result of the Biden administration's lax immigration policies.

"People they've caught in the last few days [in Border Patrol's El Paso sector] have been under the terror watch list," House Homeland Security Committee ranking member John Katko, a former federal prosecutor, said at the time. "Individuals that they have on the watch list for terrorism are now starting to exploit the southern border."

A CBP news release issued weeks later stated that two Yemeni men who were caught at the border were on the terror watch list. The CBP deleted the news release shortly after publishing it and said the information “was not properly reviewed” beforehand, a move Republicans said was a failure of transparency by the Biden administration.

In addition to the terror watch list, the government uses a separate category known as “special interest alien” to identify non-U.S. citizens it deems suspicious but has not determined to be affiliated with terrorist organizations. The DHS described the two as “not synonymous nor interchangeable.”

“Overall, we stop on average 10 individuals on the terrorist watch list per day from traveling to or entering the United States — and more than 3,700 in Fiscal Year 2017,” the DHS said in a statement issued in 2019. “Most of these individuals are trying to enter the U.S. by air, but we must also be focused on stopping those who try to get in by land.”

The surge of migrants, mostly from Central American countries, over the past year has prompted the Border Patrol to pull approximately half of its southern border-based agents to transport, process, and care for people in custody, meaning fewer agents are in the field to prevent drug smuggling and criminals entering the U.S. Oftentimes, smugglers send over large groups of families and children to divert agents to one area and then run other contraband or people with criminal records across the border where agents are not present.

Terrorism experts claimed in August that al Qaeda and Islamic State members could try to enter the U.S. illegally by way of the southern border following the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan in August 2021.


Any person in Border Patrol custody and flagged by the terror watch list during background checks would be immediately transferred to and picked up by the FBI, said Scott, a distinguished senior fellow for border security at the Texas Public Policy Foundation in Austin, Texas.
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/...der-under-biden-on-terror-watch-list-dhs-data
 
There has been chaos and anarchy in our streets for months, more than a year.

Biden's borders and sanctuary cities...ten year old girls raped by a Guatemalan illegal whose culture says it's just swell to rape children.

Riots, looting, burning, assaults and murders in cities controlled by the far left Democrat Socialist loons.

Out of control inflation, borders, crime...it's all on Slow Joe's watch.
 
42 arrested at border under Biden on terror watch list: DHS data
by Anna Giaritelli, Homeland Security Reporter |
| April 19, 2022 12:40 PM


Forty-two people on the U.S. government’s terror watch list have been arrested attempting to enter the United States illegally since President Joe Biden took office, according to federal data obtained by the Washington Examiner.

The 42 arrests happened across the country, not just on the southern border, and include people who tried to enter the U.S. by illegally crossing the border, as opposed to coming through a port of entry.

“Since January 20, 2021, the U.S. Border Patrol and the Office of Field Operations has arrested 42 subjects who were on the terror watchlist and attempted to enter the United States illegally,” the DHS wrote in response to a recent congressional inquiry. “These numbers are inclusive of anyone who may be on the No-Fly List.”

Twenty-three of the 42 arrests were made between Jan. 20, 2021, and Dec. 27, 2021, specifically between ports of entry at the southern border, according to a report from Fox News that only examined Border Patrol arrests. The other 19 arrests happened when people being inspected at the border crossings were flagged.



The 42 arrests do not include those who are on the terror watch list but evaded law enforcement at the border and made it into the country without being detected. Large numbers of migrants successfully elude authorities — the Border Patrol is aware of instances in March in which 62,000 non citizens were observed illegally entering the country, but agents were unable to apprehend them.

Last summer, recently retired Border Patrol Chief Rodney Scott told agents in his farewell address that the agency was encountering people on the terror watch list “at a level we have never seen before.”

Non citizens who are apprehended for illegal entry at the border and at land ports of entry are screened against the Terrorism Screening Center’s Terrorist Screening Database. The database lists people who have concrete affiliations with terrorist organizations and have carried out or plan to carry out terrorism, as well as people suspected of the same activities. The center comprises multiple federal agencies, while the terror watch list is overseen by the FBI.

The number of terror watch list arrests by the Border Patrol is not published online, but individual arrests are normally shared through the CBP's news releases on its website. The CBP stopped disclosing them in 2021 after publishing two reports that resulted in four arrests.

House Republicans visiting the border in El Paso, Texas, in March 2021 said border authorities had told them that people on the terror watch list "are now starting to exploit the southern border" as a result of the Biden administration's lax immigration policies.

"People they've caught in the last few days [in Border Patrol's El Paso sector] have been under the terror watch list," House Homeland Security Committee ranking member John Katko, a former federal prosecutor, said at the time. "Individuals that they have on the watch list for terrorism are now starting to exploit the southern border."

A CBP news release issued weeks later stated that two Yemeni men who were caught at the border were on the terror watch list. The CBP deleted the news release shortly after publishing it and said the information “was not properly reviewed” beforehand, a move Republicans said was a failure of transparency by the Biden administration.

In addition to the terror watch list, the government uses a separate category known as “special interest alien” to identify non-U.S. citizens it deems suspicious but has not determined to be affiliated with terrorist organizations. The DHS described the two as “not synonymous nor interchangeable.”

“Overall, we stop on average 10 individuals on the terrorist watch list per day from traveling to or entering the United States — and more than 3,700 in Fiscal Year 2017,” the DHS said in a statement issued in 2019. “Most of these individuals are trying to enter the U.S. by air, but we must also be focused on stopping those who try to get in by land.”

The surge of migrants, mostly from Central American countries, over the past year has prompted the Border Patrol to pull approximately half of its southern border-based agents to transport, process, and care for people in custody, meaning fewer agents are in the field to prevent drug smuggling and criminals entering the U.S. Oftentimes, smugglers send over large groups of families and children to divert agents to one area and then run other contraband or people with criminal records across the border where agents are not present.

Terrorism experts claimed in August that al Qaeda and Islamic State members could try to enter the U.S. illegally by way of the southern border following the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan in August 2021.


Any person in Border Patrol custody and flagged by the terror watch list during background checks would be immediately transferred to and picked up by the FBI, said Scott, a distinguished senior fellow for border security at the Texas Public Policy Foundation in Austin, Texas.
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/...der-under-biden-on-terror-watch-list-dhs-data

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‘Tricked Into Getting On Buses’: DC’s Bowser Tries To Explain Why Homeless Shelters Are Filling Up With Asylum Seekers

"Democratic Washington D.C., Mayor Muriel Bowser told CBS “Face The Nation” host Margaret Brennan, Sunday, that she fears people are being “tricked” into getting on buses to D.C.

Brennan cited a story by the Washington Post that she claimed said, “homeless shelters in D.C. were filling up, and groups are getting overwhelmed by these buses that governors of Texas and Arizona are sending here full of migrants.” The story cited doesn’t mention homeless shelters, but was about a Migrant Solidarity Mutual Aid Network (SAMU) shelter, specifically for migrants, that was full, according to the Washington Post."
 
‘Tricked Into Getting On Buses’: DC’s Bowser Tries To Explain Why Homeless Shelters Are Filling Up With Asylum Seekers

"Democratic Washington D.C., Mayor Muriel Bowser told CBS “Face The Nation” host Margaret Brennan, Sunday, that she fears people are being “tricked” into getting on buses to D.C.

Brennan cited a story by the Washington Post that she claimed said, “homeless shelters in D.C. were filling up, and groups are getting overwhelmed by these buses that governors of Texas and Arizona are sending here full of migrants.” The story cited doesn’t mention homeless shelters, but was about a Migrant Solidarity Mutual Aid Network (SAMU) shelter, specifically for migrants, that was full, according to the Washington Post."
:yayaseesathreadban: :magagrin: Where are all the JPP that mocked Abbott for sending them to Washington DC. ? The plan is working :evilnod:
 
Can’t say it enough, ever since Obama took office, and even more so beginning with the day Trump declared his candidacy, we have been hearing from the right that an apocalyptic threat has attacked our southern borders, ISIS terrorists were sneaking in, caravans by the thousands were crossing, M13 gangsters were arriving, Ebola and then the Covid infected were flooding into the country, etc, and yet, in all that time, the armageddon prophesied has happened

Imagine that
 
Can’t say it enough, ever since Obama took office, and even more so beginning with the day Trump declared his candidacy, we have been hearing from the right that an apocalyptic threat has attacked our southern borders, ISIS terrorists were sneaking in, caravans by the thousands were crossing, M13 gangsters were arriving, Ebola and then the Covid infected were flooding into the country, etc, and yet, in all that time, the armageddon prophesied has happened

Imagine that


Poor anchovies,

And all those predictions turned out to be correct. Check the crime rates, homelessness, and drug deaths in democrat run cities all over this country.
 
42 arrested at border under Biden on terror watch list: DHS data
by Anna Giaritelli, Homeland Security Reporter |
| April 19, 2022 12:40 PM


Forty-two people on the U.S. government’s terror watch list have been arrested attempting to enter the United States illegally since President Joe Biden took office, according to federal data obtained by the Washington Examiner.

The 42 arrests happened across the country, not just on the southern border, and include people who tried to enter the U.S. by illegally crossing the border, as opposed to coming through a port of entry.

“Since January 20, 2021, the U.S. Border Patrol and the Office of Field Operations has arrested 42 subjects who were on the terror watchlist and attempted to enter the United States illegally,” the DHS wrote in response to a recent congressional inquiry. “These numbers are inclusive of anyone who may be on the No-Fly List.”

Twenty-three of the 42 arrests were made between Jan. 20, 2021, and Dec. 27, 2021, specifically between ports of entry at the southern border, according to a report from Fox News that only examined Border Patrol arrests. The other 19 arrests happened when people being inspected at the border crossings were flagged.



The 42 arrests do not include those who are on the terror watch list but evaded law enforcement at the border and made it into the country without being detected. Large numbers of migrants successfully elude authorities — the Border Patrol is aware of instances in March in which 62,000 non citizens were observed illegally entering the country, but agents were unable to apprehend them.

Last summer, recently retired Border Patrol Chief Rodney Scott told agents in his farewell address that the agency was encountering people on the terror watch list “at a level we have never seen before.”

Non citizens who are apprehended for illegal entry at the border and at land ports of entry are screened against the Terrorism Screening Center’s Terrorist Screening Database. The database lists people who have concrete affiliations with terrorist organizations and have carried out or plan to carry out terrorism, as well as people suspected of the same activities. The center comprises multiple federal agencies, while the terror watch list is overseen by the FBI.

The number of terror watch list arrests by the Border Patrol is not published online, but individual arrests are normally shared through the CBP's news releases on its website. The CBP stopped disclosing them in 2021 after publishing two reports that resulted in four arrests.

House Republicans visiting the border in El Paso, Texas, in March 2021 said border authorities had told them that people on the terror watch list "are now starting to exploit the southern border" as a result of the Biden administration's lax immigration policies.

"People they've caught in the last few days [in Border Patrol's El Paso sector] have been under the terror watch list," House Homeland Security Committee ranking member John Katko, a former federal prosecutor, said at the time. "Individuals that they have on the watch list for terrorism are now starting to exploit the southern border."

A CBP news release issued weeks later stated that two Yemeni men who were caught at the border were on the terror watch list. The CBP deleted the news release shortly after publishing it and said the information “was not properly reviewed” beforehand, a move Republicans said was a failure of transparency by the Biden administration.

In addition to the terror watch list, the government uses a separate category known as “special interest alien” to identify non-U.S. citizens it deems suspicious but has not determined to be affiliated with terrorist organizations. The DHS described the two as “not synonymous nor interchangeable.”

“Overall, we stop on average 10 individuals on the terrorist watch list per day from traveling to or entering the United States — and more than 3,700 in Fiscal Year 2017,” the DHS said in a statement issued in 2019. “Most of these individuals are trying to enter the U.S. by air, but we must also be focused on stopping those who try to get in by land.”

The surge of migrants, mostly from Central American countries, over the past year has prompted the Border Patrol to pull approximately half of its southern border-based agents to transport, process, and care for people in custody, meaning fewer agents are in the field to prevent drug smuggling and criminals entering the U.S. Oftentimes, smugglers send over large groups of families and children to divert agents to one area and then run other contraband or people with criminal records across the border where agents are not present.

Terrorism experts claimed in August that al Qaeda and Islamic State members could try to enter the U.S. illegally by way of the southern border following the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan in August 2021.


Any person in Border Patrol custody and flagged by the terror watch list during background checks would be immediately transferred to and picked up by the FBI, said Scott, a distinguished senior fellow for border security at the Texas Public Policy Foundation in Austin, Texas.
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/...der-under-biden-on-terror-watch-list-dhs-data

Those are just the ones caught.
 
Poor anchovies,

And all those predictions turned out to be correct. Check the crime rates, homelessness, and drug deaths in democrat run cities all over this country.

Right, armageddon has struck, and those crime rates are higher in those Red States than Blue States with major cities
 
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