Trump Just Enforced BRILLIANT Plan That’s Stopping ALL Illegal Alien Children From Entering U S

Trump Just Enforced BRILLIANT Plan That’s Stopping ALL Illegal Alien Children From Entering U.S.

In case any of you had forgotten what we Patriotic Americans elected President Donald Trump to do, her you go….

The Trump administration stated yesterday that it plans to enact a policy which would arrest, and or detain any parents, or other guardians, who ICE believe have taken part in the smuggling of their children into the United States illegally. The new policy which is being referred to as “The Surge Initiative” aims to end the human smuggling operations which often lead to Sex Trafficking of under-age children along the Mexico-US border.
This program will identify and arrest the sponsors of unaccompanied minors who paid coyotes to bring the children across the US border. This is a huge step against underage sex trafficking, although illegal immigration activists are already up in arms over the fact that this will also lead to less illegal immigration.

Ice officials went on to add that children whose guardians are arrested will be placed with another verified guardian, or placed under the care of the Office of Refugee Resettlement. This agency usually takes custody of unaccompanied minors when they are found walking across the border alone or their parents are arrested.

International Business Times Reports:

2014 Was The Year Of The Child Immigrant Crisis, And It May Reappear In 2015
U.S. President Barack Obama’s executive action on deportation relief may have been the most groundbreaking event in immigration this year. But by and large, 2014 was the year of another immigration issue that stirred up just as much controversy: the influx of unaccompanied Central American children at the U.S.-Mexico border.

The child immigrant crisis has mostly faded from headlines and political debates, as the number of unaccompanied Central American immigrant children apprehended at the border has declined from the crisis levels reached in June and July. But immigration analysts and government officials say it could bubble up again in 2015. The Obama administration has fired on all cylinders to ensure that it can respond to another surge, but critics say one of the most crucial aspects of dealing with the crisis — namely, getting immigrants access to lawyers — still hasn’t been settled.

The influx of immigrants, mainly unaccompanied children and family units from Central America, flooded shelters and Border Patrol processing stations in Texas’ Rio Grande Valley during the spring and summer. Gang violence, domestic abuse, economic calculations, rumors of leniency and the availability of smugglers promising guidance to the U.S. all fueled the flow out of Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador, three countries with some of the world’s highest murder rates. Children and families already fleeing violent conditions endured treacherous journeys through Mexico, often on the perilous northbound freight train known as La Bestia (or The Beast).

By August, the numbers were already starting to decline, with 3,141 unaccompanied children and 3,295 families apprehended at the border that month, down from 10,622 children and 12,772 families in June. By October, the figures fell below 2013 levels. Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson attributed the decline to aggressive campaigns the administration launched to capture smugglers, warn Central Americans of the dangers of immigration, detain families caught at the border and expedite deportations. Mexico’s government also cracked down on illegal immigration, deporting tens of thousands of Central Americans from the country.

The political dust also settled in the fall. Congressional Republicans initially blocked emergency funding for the crisis on demands for a legal amendment to allow Border Patrol officers to send Central American unaccompanied minors back if they didn’t express a fear for their lives. And last month, Republicans directed their fury toward President Obama’s executive action. By the end of 2014, the child immigrant crisis had faded from the national conversation.