Biden And Harris Fly Migrants In From The Bougiest Places On Earth Under Guise Of ‘Humanitarianism’
They're flying them in from Europe, the Caribbean, and even Australia.
A federal official in El Paso, Texas, recently confirmed a Mexico law enforcement officer's statements claiming that cartels are deploying drones to transport narcotics into the United States, according to Border Report.
On Thursday, Chihuahua Public Safety Director Gilberto Loya stated that he is seeing an increase in drone use by Mexican drug cartels flying drugs into El Paso.
'We have 15 countermeasure devices against drones.'
He said, "In the area of the [Big Red X] monument, they have been using drones to cross packages of drugs and drop them off on the other side."
The monument, about 100 yards south of the border, is also known as Plaza de la Mexicanidad.
Loya also noted that the cartels in Juarez, Mexico, are using the drones to monitor law enforcement activity on both sides of the border and "as a guide to caravan the migrants into the United States," KTSM reported, translating his comments.
A U.S. federal official told Border Report that there have been drug-drone encounters in the area. However, the official could not provide any details about the number of drones or what types of narcotics are being transported.
The news outlet noted that Juarez cartels are primarily known for trafficking methamphetamine.
Despite confirmations from that official, the Border Report noted that federal officials in El Paso were unable to verify whether drones are crossing into the U.S. or whether they are being used to direct illegal immigrants.
Loya reported that his team has taken down a number of drones in the mountains of Chihuahua near the U.S.-Mexico border.
"We have 15 countermeasure devices against drones. Some force the drone to turn back, some cut off its signal entirely, so it falls to the ground, and some just track the drone to its base," he remarked.
Last month, a leaked bulletin reportedly from the U.S. Border Patrol's Yuma Sector Intelligence Unit warned that Mexican cartels were using drones to "drop explosives" on rival gangs, Blaze News previously reported.
Air Force General Gregory Guillot told the Senate Armed Services Committee earlier this year that there were "over 1,000" drone incursions each month near the border.
"I haven't seen any of them manifest in a threat to the level of national defense, but I see the potential only growing," he told lawmakers.
While authorities report an increase in drone activity at the southern border, law enforcement officials in Juarez are attempting to stave off a cartel's attacks against their surveillance cameras, according to Border Report.
Loya told reporters on Thursday that authorities recently installed 11 cameras on the streets of Juarez to monitor the cartel's activities. Since then, members of the cartel have reportedly shot at the cameras and struck them with hammers. In another instance, they allegedly set a utility pole on fire to destroy the equipment.
"Organized crime feels threatened by this system that is being installed throughout the state," Loya stated.
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Joe Biden has just issued an executive order to “temporarily prevent migrants from seeking asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border.”
While most of the media is acting as though Biden is actually closing the border, Sara Gonzales sees right through it.
“If you have the ability to close the border then close the freaking border now, we don’t need to wait until we have a seven day average of daily crossings that hits 2,500. We don’t need to wait for that,” Gonzales says.
“But Joe Biden says, ‘No, no, no, that’s fine, I will abuse my authority and I will just issue an executive border to only activate closing the border when we hit that 2,500 mark, and then the border would reopen when crossings stay below a daily average of 1,500 for seven consecutive days,’” she adds.
“It’s almost as if they don’t actually want a solution at all,” Eric July agrees. “This is why you got this kind of cat and mouse game going on.”
Gonzales calls what they’re doing “gaslighting,” before listening to what Biden had to say regarding his executive order.
“I’ve come here today to do what the Republicans in Congress refuse to do: take the necessary steps to secure our border. Four months ago, after weeks of intense negotiation between my staff and Democrats and Republicans, we came to a clear, clear bipartisan deal,” Biden said.
“It was the strongest border security agreement in decades, but then Republicans in Congress, not all, but walked away from it. Why? Because Donald Trump told them to. He told the Republicans, which has been published widely by many of you, that he didn’t want to fix the issue, he wanted to use it to attack me.”
“It was a cynical, an extremely cynical political move and a complete disservice to the American people who are looking for us to not weaponize the border but to fix it,” he concluded.
Gonzales can’t believe what she’s hearing.
“Joe Biden, the man who has done nothing for nearly four years at the border, and not only done nothing but actually reversed all of the policies that Trump had that were working.”
To enjoy more of Sara's no-holds-barred take to news and culture, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.
The Biden administration issued a set of executive actions that would temporarily suspend entry for noncitizens if the southern border sees a certain number of illegal crossers in a seven-day period.
The long-awaited action of course comes just months before the 2024 election and implements rules that would still likely total a higher number of encounters at the southwest land border than in any year under President Trump.
"These actions will be in effect when the southern border is overwhelmed, and they will make it easier for immigration officers to quickly remove individuals who do not have a legal basis to remain in the United States," the White House said in a press release.
If the average number of border encounters exceeds 2,500 in a seven-day period, entry to noncitizens would be suspended until 14 days after a seven-day average of 1,500 border encounters.
'These actions are not permanent.'
According to Fox News, in the 24 hours before the White House's declaration, the border saw 5,200 encounters and has averaged 5,000 per day for a week.
Per U.S. Customs and Border Protection data, the 30-day average from April 2024 was 5,990 encounters per day.
Under Biden's new rules, if the border saw 2,499 daily encounters (right below the threshold), without any suspensions, that would total over 912,000 encounters in a year. That number, while significantly lower than any figure achieved by the Biden administration, would still be higher than any year under President Trump.
The Biden order does not apply to visa holders, unaccompanied children, those with a medical emergency or imminent threat to their life, or victims of a "severe form" of trafficking. It also does not apply to those who use the CBP One app, which is used by about 1,500 people per day.
For fiscal year 2024 the Biden administration is averaging 217,214 southwest land border encounters per month. That means the estimated total for FY 2024 is over 2.6 million, which would be another record-setting year for the Biden administration, which saw 2.475 million in FY 2023 and 2.3 million in FY 2022.
For comparison, the border was seeing between 70,000 and 80,000 encounters per month when Biden first took office. That number quickly exploded in the first six months of his presidency.
"These actions are not permanent. They will be discontinued when the number of migrants who cross the border between ports of entry is low enough for America’s system to safely and effectively manage border operations," the Biden administration wrote.
The White House boasted that the Department of State has imposed visa restrictions on several Colombian transportation companies that have been profiting from smuggling migrants.
The administration's press release also said that the Department of Homeland Security has removed or returned more than 750,000 people, which it said was more than in every fiscal year since 2010.
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Reuters on Tuesday posted a video on X that it said shows the Texas National Guard pepper spraying migrants who were trying to cut through a fence at the U.S.-Mexico border.
The clip — recorded Monday at Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, which is across the border from El Paso — shows five people at a heavily barbed-wired fence, a couple of whom use wire cutters to clip it. But they soon make their way down a hill away from the fence once they see authorities arriving, after which the video says guard members use pepper spray to disperse the migrants.
"Let's have MORE of this!! Good job!!"
Commenters on the video seemed squarely behind the guard members' actions:
— (@)
Last week El Paso County Judge Ruben Morales dismissed riot participation charges against 211 illegal aliens caught on video in March rushing the southern border and shoving Texas National Guardsmen.
Morales said he was forced to drop the charges because the state failed to provide a transfer order to move the cases from district to county court and that his "hands [are] tied."
— (@)
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Statistics from the United States Customs and Border Protection showed that President Biden's administration is already on pace to break the record for border encounters at the southwest land border for the third straight year.
These figures are disappointingly showcased in Arizona, where the Tucson sector agents have apprehended almost 313,000 illegal immigrants in just the first five months of fiscal year 2024.
To put that figure into perspective, the first five months of FY2024 already encroaches on the total number of encounters in the Tucson sector for all of 2023, which was 373,625. As Blaze News previously reported, that number was 251,984 in 2022.
John Modlin, chief patrol agent of the U.S. Border Patrol's Tucson Sector, reported that 12,200 apprehensions were made in the first week of March 2024 alone.
This included 19 human smuggling cases.
According to Breitbart, the sector has seen a 170% increase compared to the same period of 2023.
Week in Review\u2026\n \n\u2022 12,200 Apprehensions \n\u2022 219 Federal Criminal Cases\n\u2022 19 Human Smuggling Cases\n\u2022 8 Rescues \n\u2022 11 Narcotics Events \n\u2022 5 Firearms Seized\n\u2022 1 Significant Arrests— (@)
Despite a dip in encounters at the southwest land border for January 2024, official CBP data showed that the Biden administration is on pace to easily set another record for most land border encounters in a single year.
Starting in October 2023, the first four months of FY2024 saw about 241,000, 242,000, 300,000, and 175,000 illegal encounters, respectively. At an average of more than 240,000 per month, the total number of border encounters is set to reach a whopping 2,884,611 for the entire fiscal year, easily eclipsing 2023.
President Biden's record-setting 2023 totaled 2,475,669 encounters along the southwest border, which had beaten the previous record of 2,378,944 set in 2022.
By comparison, 2022 and 2023 fiscal years under President Biden each saw more border encounters than the entirety of President Trump's four-year term combined. As well, 2022 and 2023 even combined for nearly 1.5 million more border encounters than the entire eight years of Barack Obama's presidency, historical data showed.
Biden's border, under Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, has consistently broken monthly records, as well. In fact, fiscal year 2023 ended with a record-breaking 269,735 southwest border encounters.
The 46th president's deportation numbers pale in comparison to his predecessor, despite the Washington Post noting that the number had increased to 142,000 for FY2023. That would bring total deportations under the Biden administration to around 273,000.
However, President Trump deported 709,227 illegal residents from from 2018-20.
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