At least 70 percent of
asylum applications showed signs of fraud, according to a secret 2009 internal
government audit that found many of those cases had been approved anyway.
The 2009 fraud assessment,
obtained by the House Judiciary Committee and reviewed by The Washington Times,
suggests a system open to abuse and exploitation at a time when the number of
people applying for asylum in the U.S. has skyrocketed, particularly along the
southwestern border.
Another report obtained by
the committee suggests that the government isn’t detaining most of those who
apply for asylum, including those awaiting a final judgment.
Judiciary Committee
Chairman Bob Goodlatte said the documents taint the credibility of the asylum
system, which is designed to provide an outlet for foreigners who face real
risks of being harmed if they remain in their home countries.
“Asylum fraud undermines
the integrity of our immigration system and hurts U.S. taxpayers. Once individuals are granted asylum,
they receive immediate access to all major federal welfare programs. Our
immigration system should be generous to those persecuted around the globe, but
we must also ensure our compassion isn’t being abused by those seeking to game
the system,” Mr. Goodlatte, a Virginia Republican, said in a statement to The
Times.
“Because our immigration
laws are so loosely enforced by the Obama administration, we should not be
surprised to see so much fraud in the system,” he said. “President Obama’s
continued refusal to enforce our laws on the books encourages more illegal
immigration and invites fraud.”
The Homeland Security Department
said its processes are dictated by law and that adjudicators at U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services, the agency that reviews the applications,
have to follow set standards.
“A USCIS officer must find that a ‘significant
possibility’ exists that the individual may be found eligible for asylum or
withholding of removal. During the credible fear review, USCIS initiates a
background check using immigration, national security and criminal databases,”
said Peter Boogaard, a spokesman for Homeland Security.
Final judgments are made by
immigration judges, but those cases can take years to wind through the system —
leaving the initial USCIS judgment in place.
The department says it
continually updates its fraud prevention techniques.
The asylum system has long
been a point of pride for the U.S. , but also has sparked a feverish debate over just
how generous the system should be and what sorts of checks the U.S. government should go through when trying to
determine who qualifies.
Applicants are required to
prove they face persecution back home — using what is known as a “credible
fear” claim — and that they don’t pose a danger to the U.S. They are held
during that initial assessment but often are released after that.
On Wednesday, the Obama
administration announced changes that would make it easier for those who had
tangential involvement with terrorism to win asylum or refugee status.
Under existing law, those
who provided “material support” to terrorists are to be denied their claims,
but State Department and Homeland Security officials announced a new policy
that said the support has to have been significant, and must have occurred
outside of normal commercial transactions or family interactions.
Democrats on Capitol Hill hailed the
changes, saying they will help particularly with Syrian refugees who are caught
in a web of competing groups, some of whom have been designated terrorist
agents by the U.S.
Sen. Richard J. Durbin, Illinois
Democrat, said the old rules would block a Syrian who gave a sandwich to a Free
Syrian Army soldier from getting refugee status, even though the U.S. is actively aiding the Free Syrian Army
in its fight against the Syrian regime.
Refugees are those who make claims from
their home countries, while asylum claims are made by those who arrive at or
are already in the U.S.
The 2009 internal report, which looked
at claims made in 2005, found extensive evidence of fraud.
Investigators said 12 percent of the
cases they reviewed showed clear evidence of fraud. In some cases, adjudicators
missed the evidence, and in other instances, the adjudicators weren’t using
tools available to the fraud investigators so they couldn’t have known.
In 58 percent of cases, there were
signals of fraud but not enough evidence to make a final determination. Some of
those cases had been approved, and others were sent to a judge for final
review.
The investigators said even the 70
percent combined fraud number may be low because some of the other 30 percent
of cases had problems that weren’t detected.
The report was labeled “Draft” and
apparently was never released.
In another document obtained by the
Judiciary Committee, the Homeland Security Department said it doesn’t regularly
detain those who make asylum claims. Mr. Goodlatte said that appears to
contradict the law.
“All aliens who are determined to
possess a credible fear of persecution and granted parole are released from ICE
custody. If parole is subject to conditions, the conditions must be satisfied
before parole will be granted,” the department said in an official response to
questions from Congress in December.
Mr. Goodlatte said the department must
follow the law, which he said requires many of those to be detained while they
are awaiting a ruling.
“These laws are in place to allow immigration
authorities to expeditiously determine whether the individual in question is
truly facing persecution or trying to game the system, and to prevent bad
actors from being released into our communities,” he said.
Last year, his committee obtained a
document that indicated some drug cartel family members were using the asylum
process on the southwestern border to gain a foothold in the U.S. , then continued their trafficking
activities.
But Mr. Boogaard, the Homeland Security
spokesman, said it’s been long-standing policy for U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement — the agency that handles detention — to make determinations on a
case-by-case basis.
“If an individual claiming asylum at the
border is deemed to be a threat to public safety or national security, ICE has
the authority to keep the individual in detention until their case is heard by
an immigration judge. Only a judge can determine asylum eligibility,” he said.
This story was originally reported by Stephen Dinan, in The Washington Times
Ben Ferro
benferro@insideins.com
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