This Is a ‘Cheat Sheet’ Found at the Border to
Coach Illegals on How to Stay in the U.S.
U.S. law enforcement
officials have been finding “cheat sheets” along the border used
by illegal immigrants to try to stay in the United States and
not get deported after they’ve been caught.
The notes, believed to be supplied by human trafficking
groups, give pointers in Spanish on what immigrants should say
when confronted by border authorities.
One federal law enforcement official dubbed them “illegal
alien cheat sheets.”
A copy of one sheet obtained by TheBlaze lists a series of
questions that U.S. authorities will consider in granting
someone an immigration hearing.
“It’s proof they are told
what to say,” a Department of Homeland Security official told
TheBlaze. Often times, the sheets get “destroyed or thrown away
before illegal aliens are apprehended.”
A “cheat sheet” discovered near the U.S.-Mexico border.
(Photo obtained by TheBlaze)
The sheet obtained by TheBlaze has handwritten notes about
the appropriate “yes” or “no” answers to the questions, along
with some jotted personal notes on what to say to U.S.
authorities. They include, “Who did you live with?” and the
answer, “My aunt, but she crossed the border.”
Another handwritten question is, “Where does your father
live?” The answer underneath reads, “I don’t know him or even
his name.”
Border Patrol agents
in McAllen, Texas, have said most of the illegal immigrants they
encounter
have the same “rehearsed” answers about
having “credible fear” in fleeing their countries so they will
not be returned.
Among the printed statements in Spanish on the sheet are:
• Why did you abandon your country?
• Because of poverty and misery.
• You’re in fear of
your government and afraid to live in your country.
• You’re afraid of
extortion from Maras [MS-13 gang].
• Do you have family in the United States?
• Is this the first time you’ve come into this country?
• Did you swim across
the river?
• Somebody told you
that if you brought a minor child into the United States you
can stay.
More than 52,000
unaccompanied minors from Central America have illegally crossed
into the United States over the past eight months, mainly
through the Border Patrol’s Rio Grande Valley sector in Texas.
Many of the families arriving from Honduras, El Salvador and
Guatamala believe they will not be returned home if they have
young children with them, authorities say.
Federal law enforcement officials told TheBlaze the sheets
are prepared by human traffickers whose job it is to ensure
passage of the illegals into the U.S. The cost of traveling from
Central America to the United States can vary from $5,000 to
$8,000, according to recently arrived immigrants and law
enforcement officials who spoke to TheBlaze. Many who cross the
border use the “credible fear” claim, saying they are afraid to
return home, and knowing that they will obtain a notice to
appear in immigration court to appeal to stay in the country.
“It’s proof they are told what to say.”
Because of the overcrowded conditions at border facilities, many families are
released at their own recognizance and subsequently fail to report to their
hearings.
“Several years ago, we would hold illegal aliens until their court date,” the
DHS official said. “We didn’t have this huge crisis when they knew they couldn’t
get away and were being held. Now we let everyone go because we have no space —
the administration also makes it impossible to do our job and deport them.”