Haitians in Reynosa, Mexico, check their CBP One applications for their invitations to cross a U.S. port of entry for parole processing into the United States.
WASHINGTON, D.C. - For all of 2023, top Biden administration officials have repeatedly assured Americans that aspiring illegal border crossers would undergo "Rigorous security vetting" and eligibility checks when they use the CBP One appointment system to fly or walk by government invitation over the border for quick parole into the United States.
From January through September 5, 2023, DHS vetting resulted in only 698 rejections for unspecified "Ineligibility Reasons" out of 225,000 invited to cross the border into the United States, according to new records obtained by the Center for Immigration Studies through ongoing FOIA litigation against U.S. Customs and Border Protection.
That number - 698, or 0.31 percent of total applicants - provides confirmation of an administration spokesperson's response in April 2023 to a Fox News Digital inquiry, which was that DHS had rejected less than 1 percent of the 75,000 parole seekers it said used the CBP One interface to cross by government invitation at land ports as of last April.
Against repetitive assurances that all who submit security information through CBP One interfaces would require rigorous vetting, this implausibly small rejection number would decisively demonstrate that Biden's DHS is hurriedly and indiscriminately waving through almost anyone who applies, without regard to fraud or ineligibility such as home nation criminality.
That's because, for super-majorities of all the foreign nationals who have and will use the CBP One quick-entry permit program, origin nations that might hold background or intelligence information on individuals are diplomatically estranged from the United States, or are incapable of keeping and sharing such records.
As the Center for Immigration Studies alone reported in November 2022, immigrants from Muslim-majority nations all over the Middle East, South Asia, and North Africa had been using the CBP One system to gain parole at the land ports since at least the summer of 2022, including Syrians, Afghans, and Somalis.
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