07/07/2013
Central American migrants who are lured by the U.S. open border policy are getting exploited by Mexican cartels which are expanding their rackets from the drug trade to human trafficking as reported by Isabella Cota for The Guardian:
"Why? Because a dose of drugs can be bought and consumed only once, but the same human being can be exploited in many forms over and over again throughout a lifetime," says Marcela Chacón, Costa Rica's deputy minister of interior and police.
Inexplicably, the so-called immigration reform bill proposed by U.S. lawmakers contains no provisions by which intelligence data could be obtained from illegal aliens on these trafficking groups. The pending bill should be called the Nightmare Act since it protects organized crime and corrupt officials involved in human trafficking.
source
Central American migrants who are lured by the U.S. open border policy are getting exploited by Mexican cartels which are expanding their rackets from the drug trade to human trafficking as reported by Isabella Cota for The Guardian:
"Why? Because a dose of drugs can be bought and consumed only once, but the same human being can be exploited in many forms over and over again throughout a lifetime," says Marcela Chacón, Costa Rica's deputy minister of interior and police.
Inexplicably, the so-called immigration reform bill proposed by U.S. lawmakers contains no provisions by which intelligence data could be obtained from illegal aliens on these trafficking groups. The pending bill should be called the Nightmare Act since it protects organized crime and corrupt officials involved in human trafficking.
source
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