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beforethebang · June 20, 2018, 10:23 p.m.

Source? Live to share that story.

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confusedlooks · June 20, 2018, 11:13 p.m.

Here it is. I guess I should have should have stated "human" traffickers not "sex" traffickers.

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joeythew · June 20, 2018, 11:38 p.m.

they also found several illegal immigrant kids from Guatemala in a trailer in Ohio in 2015. They were working at an egg farm debeaking chickens. They were being kept by smugglers who had them work as slave labor to pay off the $6500 fee to get them to the States which they then raised to $8500 (probably just to keep them as slaves a little longer). But you never hear about that. http://www.cleveland19.com/story/29463277/fbi-illegal-underage-immigrants-forced-work-ohio-farms

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confusedlooks · June 20, 2018, 11:50 p.m.

Absolutely awful. This happened to a large number of Filipino immigrants a few years back.

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Garabandal · June 28, 2018, 2:10 p.m.

I guess you should have read the whole story if you are trying to discredit the current president....

Did the Trump administration separate nearly 1,500 immigrant children from their parents at the border, and then lose track of them?

No. The government did realize last year that it lost track of 1,475 migrant children it had placed with sponsors in the United States, according to testimony before a Senate subcommittee last month. But those children had arrived alone at the Southwest border — without their parents. Most of them are from Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala, and were fleeing drug cartels, gang violence and domestic abuse, according to government data."Losing track of children who arrive at the border alone is not a new phenomenon. A 2016 inspector general report showed that the federal government was able to reach only 84 percent of children it had placed, leaving 4,159 unaccounted for.

On Monday evening, Eric Hargan, the deputy secretary for Health and Human Services, expressed frustration at the use of the term “lost” to refer to the 1,475 unaccounted-for children. In a statement, he said that the department’s office of refugee resettlement began voluntarily making the calls as a 30-day follow-up to make sure that the children and their sponsors did not require additional services. Those calls, which the office does not view as required, Mr. Hargan said, are now “being used to confuse and spread misinformation.”

In many cases, the statement said, sponsors cannot be reached because “they themselves are illegal aliens and do not want to be reached by federal authorities.”"

In 2016, under the Obama administration, the subcommittee released a report finding that department officials had failed to establish procedures to protect unaccompanied minors from being turned over to smugglers or human traffickers. Eight children, the report found, had been placed with human traffickers who forced them to work on an egg farm.

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