I bully hunting in the Great America. Let's continue. And of course, the one issue the Democratic Party has recently discovered which is destroying our majestic cities as the legal migration. So many of the blue cities and blue states, or sanctuary cities and sanctuary states, please come. And they were reading the base of the statue of liberty, give me your huddled, muddled masses yearning for freedom. But suddenly the Roosevelt Hotel in New York City is packed and
stacked. Nobody can move in Los Angeles or Portland or San Francisco, and every city is now a border city. And what's been happening on the southern border has not been well reported except by News Nation and Allie Bradley, who's been there for the last two years, most of the time examining first fast and factually what's going on. And Allie Bradley, welcome again to the Bill
Cunningham Show. An alley you of a posting about the infant abandon at the border and horrifying conditions not well covered by the so called mainstream meeting you're with News Nation, Can you tell the American people your observation and tell us about the infinite abandoned on the border. Yeah, hey, Bill, the unaccompanied
miners crisis is one that is exploding in its own. Obviously, we're seeing a lot of migrants cross over the southern border, but or we're seeing as a lot of children coming across alone, or they're coming across with an adult that is not their parents. That border patrol determines right then and there that individual is not that guardian for that child, and so that child then becomes
unaccompanied. Now, what we saw here yesterday in the Rio Grand Valley, which is down in the southern pocket of Texas, there there was a two month old child that was left abandoned in a park. CBP actually telling me a migrant woman that was in a group alerted them that the baby was over there, and with the baby was a backpack full of diapers and formula.
And I talked to a retired HSI special agent who worked specifically in human trafficking, and he said that often times these kids are used for a see that maybe that's what their payment is to the car tells that they can cross, and then that child is used to cross a different single adults, maybe a
man who wouldn't really have the likelihood of getting in without a child. But the other thing I learned while investigating this child was that a special the special agent tells me that these children are also used by the cartel as a distraction because if they send a baby over across the border with someone and that person that dishes them in a park, it's all hands on deck, Bill,
everybody on scene is going to go respond to that baby. To two month olds, so the cartel knows this, there are always one step ahead of us. They're using infant babies now to prey on our humanity and lure the agents away from the front lines. And that's exactly what's happening. That happened down in the Rio Grand Valley City, and that is not far from Front in Texas, where Texas CPS just took control of that land to patrol it
because that inten basically owned by the cartels. We've seen several images coming out of Front in Texas of armed cartel members with massive rifles with thought the armor and they're actually carrying body piercing ammunition. So now DPS is out there patrolling that area as well. But when we talk about the Unaccompanied Children Bill, we're looking at you know, more than nearly excuse me, eleven thousand kids
in HHS our custody. We're looking at an average, a thirty day average of three hundred and eighty children every single day coming across that border unaccompanied. That's the reality at the southern border with the kids right now, almost four hundred children unaccompanied that the border is aware of. I would assume there's many more above the number. So on a two month old is left on a picnic table, or four hundred children come across unaccompanied, what is the border
patrol? Are they? What's the function? What happens Let's say that two month old, if we could put a tag on and see where they go. We don't have a facility of orphanages or you know, foster care, daycare, we don't have those. Well we're not we're not positioned that way. We're not conjured up that fashion. So what happens to the two month old? What happens today to that child? Where are the other four hundred?
Well, the you know, the Biden administration has kind of made it so that we are we do have shelter space available for these kids, because they made it very clear that they weren't going to be detaining children, and that is one of the messages us getting back to migrants. You've a better shot of walking into the country if you have a child, right, we know that that has been talked about for a while. Well, what happens to those kids? Well, we have three federal facilities that have been vacant
for about the last year. One of them in Pacas, tex Is just reopened this last week and they're housing about five hundred kids. Okay, there are still ten thousand, five hundred children roughly without anywhere to go, right, So where are they They're not those other two facilities they are that we're
paying for federal tax faired dollars. No, they're in two hundred and ninety six facilities across seven states through contract companies, one of them being South Petey Programs, which is one of the bigger players in these shelters for these unaccompanied children. But what happens is they are instantly received by border patrol and then they are medically evaluated on site and then they are turned over to Health and
Human Services. There they will take them into custody, they will pass them over to an NGO or put them into one of these facilities to house them until they can get to a sponsor. Now, I've reached out the Southwest Key Program Bill to find out what kind of expertise these individuals have that are working at these facilities, but I haven't heard that as far as ten thousand, five hundred children, the foster care system in this country is presently overwhelmed.
I live in Little Cincinnati, Ohio, and they have a few hundred children without parents willing to take in these foster children, to adopt them, or guardians to care for them. I can't imagine the chaos into a system overwhelmed when you put ten thousand, five hundred children automatically, and NGOs and non government organizations such as Catholic charities all of a sudden, you in the months and the years ahead, we're going to have tens of thousands of more
without the ability of caring for them. So Alie Bradley of News Nation, I ask again, do you know? Does anyone know what happens in a year or two when the numbers twenty thousand or thirty thousand we have no available ability of someone sponsoring them. We don't have an orphanage system anymore, which we used to have. What do we do with them? Yeah, it's
a hope and a prayer right to link them up with these sponsors. And it's just heartbreaking because even border patrol saying, you know, efforts are ongoing to identify this child, they don't even know who the child is. Right, that's another layer of all of this. They don't even know who these kids are. And the kids, if they're under three, they don't know who they are. So how is Border patrol able to do their job efficiently?
And how are these NGOs and these health and human services entities also able to do that job efficiently and effectively? Are they rolling children's fingerprints? What are we doing? Because we know DNA testing stops, So what's going on? You're right, what is the threshold? Right? We keep moving the goalpost. Right now, there are twenty five thousand migrants and custody at the southern border. Of twenty five thousand, we haven't seen that number since before
the end of Title forty two. But not very many people are talking about it because why we move the bowl post? The new normal for what's down at the border is not is not sustainable. But the American people are hearing that the border is secure. Karen John Pierre says, everything's fine. Yeah, JP, it's not. And so at this point you talk about you have a posting about exploited by human smugglers and criminal organizations every day. So
the children are being used as trading out to a mom or dad. I've seen stories a mother or father might have four kids and give one to the cartels because that child is going to be used to loot apple stores, or that child is going to be used for sexual purposes. And you give up a child so you get the other three is payment? Does human smuggling like that occur? Absolutely? And that's what Victor Avola, the retired HSI agent
I talked to you. And that's what border patrols say too. And they're people are a good commodity for the car tell it's a thirteen billion dollar industry. People can be reused. That's a disgusting thing to think about, but it's real. These kids are being recycled bill. So they might come across, you know, the mom, like you said, might that might be
their payments. They might say, Okay, we've got three kids, we'll take one of them instead if you haven't pay five grand a cross or whatever we might take from you, or hey, you don't have five grands, give us, you know, Johnny, and we'll link them up with you
on the other side. And so Johnny might cross with a single adult man or a single adult woman who wouldn't otherwise just walk right into the country, right because there's that fear that single adults aren't going to get in, and statistically those are the ones being removed, so they're going to try to come in with the childs. They're being exploited that way, and then like I
said, they're being used as a distraction. They're come over and they're leaving them as parks and things like that, so that all of the law enforcement have to respond to that area, so that they have holes in the border and they can capitalize and send jobs or you know, do their nefarious activities where no one's looking, and they you know, they want these people,
some of these individuals. What I'm learning from HSI is that sometimes these people, these single adults, they don't even have to pay for the kid to cross with them if it's not their kid, because the cartel wants to keep these individuals moving bill They can only make money if they go if they keep walking towards the border. So here's a kid, you have a better shot go. That's the reality right now, and they know the likelihood of having
a child with you means you have a better chance of getting in. When you look at the numbers bill you look at under the Biden administration, we have had under over four hundred and two thousand unaccompanied children across the southern border since the beginning of February of twenty twenty one, gave him January, okay, February twenty twenty one, until now, four hundred and two thousand unaccompanied
children have crossed our border. When you look at the three or prior to the Biden administration, one hundred and fifty nine thousand, So that is I mean, we're more than doubles of where we were with these unaccompanied children. And a lot of it is the messaging. That is what agents say, because these people are being told you can get in with the kid, and that's what we're seeing. We're seeing a massive uptick in these unaccompanied children.
And Ali Brad of News Nation, you've covered the story for years and you've spent hundreds of hours watching this. The idea that my Jorkis, who's head of HHS, says the southern border is secure. And the fact that the Kamala Harris is in charge of the southern border, and the fact that Joe Biden may or may not have visited the southern border. He doesn't know half
the time if he's at the northern border or the southern border. Nonetheless, is there any indication this thing is peaking or stopping or are we just in the middle of the stream and it just keeps on flowing? You know, I think right now we aren't at a peak. I think we're on the roller coaster ride up. Bill. Remember when we talked at the end of title forty two. I was down in Brownsville, Texas, and we had a conversation similar to this, and he said, what's going to happen next?
And I said, well, we're in a wait and seat. It's not a matter of if, but when the levy is going to break. We are seeing stress fractures all along the dam that is the border, right and so right now we're seeing that break. And what I was reporting and what agents had told me, what Lake had told me, is that the cartel was kind of waiting to see how we would implement Title eights and if we would implement Title eight. So that's why numbers kind of went down in
June, right there was a searra. If you cross in between the ports of entry, you wily ban for five years and ineligible for asylum. That is what DHS Secretary Mayorc has said. So there was a fear there. Well, what does Title eight means. It means you walk in and you're inserted into removal proceedings. What are removal proceedings? It's an NTA with a court date two to five years out. That's the reality right now. So
they know that the cartel knows we're not sending people back. We had thirty three thousand people from Honduras and the Real Grand Valley alone in one month, and we sent back four thousand of them. The cartel sees what we're doing, they know what we're doing. We are always reacting to them. So that role that we saw it was them figuring out how to navigate around Title
light. And they figured it out. And you know, now they're using trains, trains, and I understand that the Biden administration is given to Venezuelans hundred thousands of work permits, which means you're like legal. Then they quickly communicate with their friends and relatives back in Caracas saying come on in because you're going to get in and those decisions. What impact is the Venezuelans getting like four hundred thousand work permits done to cause more of the surge from Venezuela.
Yeah, I mean it is causing a third right, because the messaging word of mouth is much stronger than anything that DHS can put out. So when you have your few friends that made it in, just fine, and then it's getting a work visa, right, come on down, might as well just try. And that's what they tell me. They're leaving nothing trying for something, you know, work case scenario, they go back to nothing. But the reality is this, that messaging is going to get back. What
agents say is they're worry. That's the new way. The Venezuelan migrants that are going to inevitably show up will be hopeful that TPS will also be extended to them, that temporary protective status where they're getting those work permits. So there's that right they're going, hey, if we come, there's a point where they're going to break and they're going let us stay right. Yeah, So that's the reality right now right the messaging is not getting back, it
is being twisted, it is being controlled by the cartel. And in fact, right now here we are towards the end of in the September, one of October, and this is the high time because the weather. We've gone through the tough summer with temperatures of one hundred and ten degrees and which hundreds
of people. Do you have any sense how many people are killed or dive natural causes are murdered along the way, because this is in something chronicled because there's some gap between Nicaragua and Mexico and which that's that's the flow point. But any idea how many hundreds? Well, what's a Please tell the American
people the deaths that happen. So the UN actually had deemed the Darien Gap, which is what you're talking about, that that land mask there that they're all walking across, as the most dangerous and that was for years thill because the cartel, basically indigenous cartel, is running that jungle. There's no law
enforce and there's no oversight rights so free for all. Now, the UN put out a report pretty recently where it designated the US Mexico border the most dangerous crossing now, and that is because we see I believe it was it's about fifteen hundred deaths last year that the UN accounted, and they say more than I think it's six hundred and eighty hopping at our southern border. So they're saying the US southern border is the most dangerous crossing on the planet right
now. Iran Iraq, no big deal, China, no big deal, Russia, no big deal. It's the US border and the policies, of course, policies cause this. Some policies can solve it, and there's no will until recently to solve the problem with either the US Army with a border
wall with something of that character. But even if that has put up at this point, I guess Ali Bradley of News Nation isn't almost too late, because it's there's another one to two hundred million who have said they would love to come to the United States. Right now, we're dealing with numbers of fifteen thirty million. There's another one hundred million waiting to come. What's going to stop it? You know, you can't put the toothpased back in the
tube on this one. I don't know how you stop this bill, honestly. I mean, you've got to start enforcing the law. That's what all border patrol agents say. You've got to actually put Title eight in place and actually remove the individuals who are crossing between the ports of entry and lap on those consequences. But there aren't any consequences really right now, so they're going
to keep coming. You know, people were asking did that deal with Mexico work where they're going to start supporting people from Mexico and deep pressurizing on their side. You know, yeah, Mexico, it's like lip service, right, They play the ball for a couple of weeks, and then all of a sudden, the federalis are gone and here we are again. So who knows how long that will last. But again, it's a thirteen billion dollar
industry to move people in drugs for the cartels. You think that some piddley agreement between the US and Mexico is going to stop the most powerful entity over there. Do you think that they're not going to find a way. Do you think that in a year we're not going to be reacting in a different way to the cartel's tactics. Absolutely, how does this stuff without actually implementing and enforcing a law that that would would bring up consequences. Right there's it's
a slap on the wrist in back you go. And a lot of these migrants are also getting the opportunity if they cross in between ports of entry bill, they're able to withdraw their asylum application there at the border and go up to the port of entry and apply that way. So they're like, hey, you wanted to do it this way, Nope, you can resend,
you can voluntarily go back. But you think they're escorting them up to the port of entry and going, okay, let's build this out and let's do this no border visualizing saying they're going right back across like title forty two styles walking in through a different area, you know, the holes of Mouthville, the gates, Silvern, and Lukeville. They're walking through any other area that they can find. And even if the wall is stretches from point A to
point BE along that southern order, the cartel's gonna find a way. Ladders, rope tunnels will slow them down, you know, And all law enforcements say it's a tool you need all of the tools to be successful, and so the order wall is one of those tools that most law enforcement believe you need. And a really profound sentiment about the border wall that I learned down here is one of the sheriffs says that the border wall is a clear symbol
of trustpass. You know when you've crossed that border wall, that you are breaking the law. Right, that's the point blank right. But what's really wild, Bill, is when you're down there talking to those migrants, it's a beacon of hope. So it's the symbol of trustpass on this side, and for them, it's a beacon of hope because that's the last thing that they have to get through to freedom for them. Allie Bradley of News Nations,
thank you very much. The US military needs to be used to obliterate the drug cartels because they're killing one hundred thousand Americans every year through fentinel. Allie Bradley, you're the best there is at this and thank you for your reporting from the southern border. And God bless you. Thank you, Allie, Bill, God bless you. Take care. All right, those are the facts. How will you react? Bill Cunningham, News Radio seven hundred
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