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WASHINGTON, D.C. Today, Senator Ashley Moody introduced two pieces of legislation to expand immigration enforcement efforts and reverse reckless and dangerous policies implemented by the Biden administration. The Reimbursement for Immigration Partnerships with Police to Allow Local Law Enforcement Act, or RIPPLE Act, is an expansion of the 287(g) program that enables states to assist in immigration enforcement and expedites the process of fixing Biden’s open-border mess that wreaked chaos across the country. The Stop Government Abandonment and Placement Scandals (Stop GAPS) Act requires the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) in the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to work with states when placing unaccompanied migrant children with an adult or entity seeking custody. The bill aims to address Biden’s ORR losing track of tens of thousands of children who were often times placed in dangerous situationsreported in the Third Presentment of the Twenty-First Statewide Grand Jury in Florida.

Senator Ashley Moody said, “The Biden administration did historic damage to our country’s immigration and national security structures, putting our nation and unaccompanied children at risk, and turning federal agencies into middlemen for mass human trafficking operations. As Florida’s Attorney General I fought constantly in court to stop the intentional destruction of our border and trafficking of minors.

“Expanding the 287(g) program will provide resources to state law enforcement to more efficiently get dangerous criminals out of our communities. Right now, we are watching disorder and chaos spread through California. This bill will ensure that our local, state and federal law enforcement have the resources they need to hold those who break the law accountable. This lawlessness will not be tolerated. As a United States Senator, I will continue to work with President Trump to not only reverse the failures of the Biden administration but ensure that it can never happen again—the RIPPLE Act and The Stop Government Abandonment and Placement Scandals (Stop GAPS) Act are critical steps.

Congresswoman Laurel Lee, the lead House sponsor of the RIPPLE Act, said, “Amid the escalating civil unrest in Los Angeles, our law enforcement officers, with unwavering courage, face life-threatening situations while upholding the rule of law and protecting communities from the chaos of riots. Their actions demonstrate a selfless dedication to preserving our nation’s security and values. The RIPPLE Act ensures that local law enforcement officers have the support they need to help enforce immigration laws. By covering overtime pay and key personnel costs, this bill ensures that local, state, and federal law enforcement officers can work together to stop the chaos and lawlessness in California, and to ensure our immigration laws are followed across America.”

BACKGROUND:

The Reimbursement for Immigration Partnerships with Police to Allow Local Law Enforcement Act, or the RIPPLE Act, expands eligible reimbursable expenses to state and local law enforcement agencies participating in the 287(g) program. It would enable non-federal law enforcement agencies to commit already-sworn officers to immigration enforcement so they can act as a force multiplier for federal immigration enforcement in the short term while hiring, training, and on-boarding new federal officers – a more time-intense process – is underway.  

The Stop Government Abandonment and Placement Scandals (Stop GAPS) Act, would strike existing law which allows the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) to place unaccompanied children with any adult or entity seeking custody. It would require ORR to work with states to help find homes and proper placements for the minors and to track these children for the duration of their stay in U.S. while immigration proceedings are ongoing.

The Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) is a division of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) that is responsible for coordinating the care and placement of refugees, including unaccompanied children, who arrive in the United States. When children arrive in the United States without a parent or legal guardian, they are initially processed by U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) or U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and subsequently transferred to the custody of the ORR, which is responsible for their care and placement.

The Biden Administration infamously lost track of tens of thousands of unaccompanied immigrant children, many of whom were placed into dangerous situations as reported in the Third Presentment of the Twenty-First Statewide Grand Jury in Florida. Additionally, the Biden HHS refused to provide documents or produce witnesses before the Grand Jury and apparently actively encouraged the Florida entities with which it has contracted to not cooperate with the Grand Jury. 

According to the Grand Jury findings:

“ORR is facilitating the forced migration, sale, and abuse of foreign children…This process exposes children to horrifying health conditions, constant criminal threat, labor and sex trafficking, robbery, rape and other experiences not done justice by mere words.”

The presentment found, among other things:

  • During a 10-month period in 2021, ORR lost contact with nearly 20,000 UAC;
  • A report showed HHS and the U.S. Department of Justice received thousands of allegations of sexual abuse;
  • Testimony of UAC revealed that a minor was ‘pimped out’ by their ‘aunt’ (whom they did not know prior to arriving in the U.S.), some UAC ran away from sponsors for being sold for sex, and ORR placed a teenage girl in the house of unknown men with no private bedroom;
  • ORR discouraged close checking of addresses of sponsors and some sponsors utilized addresses in Jacksonville including a strip club, empty lots surrounded by stacked shipping containers or open fields;
  • During the Biden administration, case managers are only performing home studies in approximately 4.5% placements and discretionary home studies in less than one percent of cases.
  • One case manager reported having to release a teenage girl to a male sponsor with multiple other unknown males living in the same residence—all unidentified. The presentment stated this is not an isolated incident.
  • Criminal history, lack of citizen status and even total refusal to submit to a background check does not disqualify sponsors from receiving a UAC. One sponsor was given custody despite having been to Florida prison before for battery on a child;
  • A disturbing pattern emerged with sponsors applying to receive multiple UAC. One address in Texas showed 44 children sent to a single residence. One contractor testified that it placed 598 UAC with only 132 sponsors or each sponsor receiving 4.5 UAC;
  • In Florida, neither U.S. Department of Homeland Security or HHS actively coordinates or consults with the state on the UAC resettled in Florida. The state doesn’t receive meaningful notice when UAC are transported here. Florida receives no information on backgrounds, criminal history or immigration status of the UAC brought here, nor does the state have any assurance the UAC are in-fact minors; and
  • During a six-month period in 2021, more than 70 airplanes landed at Jacksonville International Airport, arriving in the middle of the night at the commercial terminal with UAC. One of these UAC was actually 24 years old and ended up brutally killing his sponsor. ORR now conceals small groups of UAC on regular commercial flights.

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