The migrant crisis has left residents in Joe Biden’s hometown “worried sick” as the president struggles to maintain his open border policy.
Under Biden’s supervision, thousands of migrants attempt to enter the US every day.
The president has nevertheless drawn criticism for not even bothering to “acknowledge the problem.”
The host of WILK Newsradio’s Bob Cordaro Show, Bob Cordaro, told GB News that people in the president’s hometown “are worried sick over it” in reference to the threat posed by the US migrant crisis.
“I think we’re going to face terrorist incidents in this country from the people we’ve let into the country without vetting,” he continued.
“I mean, with his open border policy, we’ve created a nightmare on our hands if 1 percent of 10 million people is bad, whether it’s criminal or terrorist.”
“I believe that the working-class and middle-class residents of this area are beginning to feel that bite.”
Just prior to the FBI’s latest alert, remarks were made indicating that terrorist organizations may launch an attack during the holiday season, citing the Israel-Hamas conflict as justification for escalating hostilities.
According to a recent joint bulletin issued to local, state, and federal law enforcement by the Departments of Homeland Security and Justice, organizations such as al Qaeda and ISIS are likely to take advantage of the ongoing conflict in Gaza to launch attacks.
According to the statement, terror groups intend to take advantage of the current conflict in the Middle East “to increase calls for violence in the US during the holiday season compared to prior years.”
The bulletin stated that synagogues, churches, and Jewish community members could be the most likely “primary targets.”
“I had been given information about these illegal flights coming into the Wilkes Barre Scranton International Airport a year ago, maybe even two now,” Cordaro continued.
“We stopped them after we caught them, but not before.” Not until they repeatedly misrepresented the fact that they were even taking place.
“However, I believe that people’s opinions regarding the migration and illegal immigration crisis that the Biden administration has caused are extremely divided.”
Truly Ugly’: Family Decries Deadly Violence Migrants Face in Juárez on Journey to US
The young woman in her 20s was lying on her back in the sand, her dark hair and brown complexion belied by her athletic attire of blue socks and no shoes. Now dry, a thick stream of blood flowed from her forehead and nose, collecting beneath her head. Her hoodie sleeve was torn, revealing cuts on her right arm.
“This is a popular route toward the United States,” a state police investigator said at the scene. “I was looking for her purse or backpack, shoes, an identification, but she had nothing with her.”
According to an El Paso Times investigation, the woman was added to a list of 69 potential migrants who may have died in Juárez between January 1 and November 7, 2023, comprising 68 foreign nationals and one Mexican. It includes the forty foreign nationals who perished in the fire that occurred on March 27 at the migrant detention center.
The precise number of migrants who have vanished and died in Juárez is unknown.
In order to handle one mass migration crisis after another, both the Biden and Trump administrations mainly relied on measures that drove migrants back to Mexico. Thousands of migrants have been sent back to Juárez and other border towns as a result of this.
Human rights activists claim that laws that make it necessary for vulnerable migrants to wait in Mexico before applying for asylum in the United States subject them to violence while they wait for immigration relief.
Fourteen of the 69 dead are still unidentified. While state investigators in other cases have not even been able to determine the deceased’s country of origin, authorities said that the woman found in Lomas de Poleo was Guatemalan.
At a press conference on November 10, César Gustavo Juáregui, the Attorney General of Chihuahua, stated that 88% of violent incidents in Juárez have ties to organized crime.
“Coyotes,” kidnappers, or even the military can kill migrants.
Two migrants were killed and four others were injured by gunfire fired by Mexican army personnel on October 9 in the Santa Teresa desert, according to Carlos Manuel Salas, the district attorney for Chihuahua’s Northern Zone, which includes Juárez. Federal prosecutors are looking into the case.
Because her brother was interred in a section of the municipal cemetery designated for unidentified bodies, Beatriz Correa is currently unable to retrieve his remains. She was told by the attorney general in 2022 that an exhumation would have to wait five years.
Nine years of experience as a social worker at Casa del Migrante, Ivonne López, clarified that she has personally gotten financial support and legal documentation from funeral homes to assist families from other nations. She also provides families with psychological services.
In actuality, there is still a lot that needs to be done in order to get these deaths investigated and solved, or in order to gain access to the legal system.
El Paso Times requested interviews with the Local Search Commission of Juárez and the Attorney General of Chihuahua; neither responded.
Beatriz Correa urged authorities to take action after her brother was killed, abducted, and vanished while attempting to migrate.
She said, “All I ask is that the government stop hiding all of this.” “They are aware of the disappearances that are occurring in Juárez. Although I suppose controlling it is difficult, they still have options.
“I sincerely regret not knowing what Juárez was like. I don’t know why they hide the problem. At least they should put signs in the airport.”