Syrian
Refugees in N.C. Still Cannot Be Tracked
Governor,
congressman warn of broken screening process
Source: Carolina Journal
“We’re not given any forewarning of when
they’re coming, where they’re going to, or who they are,” McCrory told Carolina
Journal. That raises concerns, he said, because the refugees could be coming
from countries embroiled in civil wars or they may be linked to Islamic
terrorism.
Refugees
are sent to charity relocation agencies that “have more information than my
state public safety officials,” McCrory said. The FBI does not have a list of
entering refugees and where they are sent, prior to and after relocation,
“which was astounding to me.”
The feds
“use the privacy card” to deny that information to state and federal public
safety officials, McCrory said.
That is a
cause for “great concern,” he said. If refugees were involved in some criminal
or terror-related activities, state law enforcement investigators would not
know where to find them unless the nonprofit agencies provided the information.
The state Department of Health and Human Services has some data the nonprofits
have provided, but they’re not obligated to do so.
The DHHS
Refugee Services Office receives information after a refugee is settled and
begins to receive services, such as employment help or English language
training, said DHHS spokeswoman Alexandra Lefebvre.
“The
challenge is the lack of information sharing from the federal government about
individuals prior to arriving in North Carolina ,” Lefebvre said. “The state
receives some information after the resettlement has taken place. The
individual’s personal information is protected by various privacy laws.”
The FBI
“does initial background checks on what they can,” but is not allowed to
maintain that information due to the privacy regulations, McCrory said. He
wanted to ask President Obama about that situation during a February National
Governors Association meeting, “but the president wouldn’t take my question at
the White House. I think he was given forewarning that I was going to ask.”
Last year
he introduced the American Safe Act barring entry to the United States of any Iraqi or Syrian national
unless the FBI director certified a thorough background check had been
completed. The House passed it overwhelmingly. Senate Democrats blocked it from
coming to that body for a vote.
“I hope we
don’t have a problem with ISIS sneaking folks in through this program, but it’s
definitely a vulnerability,” Hudson said.
“The three
areas that I’m concerned about is the folks that can come here without a visa,
the terrorists exploiting the Syrian refugee program, and our porous Southern
border,” he said. “Until we get serious about that, we don’t know who and
what’s coming across that border.”
Hudson
said he continues to highlight the refugee vetting vulnerabilities, but
“everybody’s moved on to another issue, and they’re pretending like this isn’t
a problem,” even though two terrorists were arrested on Jan. 8 after entering
the country on the refugee program, and the director of national intelligence
“tells us that they’ve caught terrorists trying to come through the refugee
program.”
Obama’s
goal is to admit 1,500 Syrians per month, and expedite the screening process
“that we know is already broken,” Hudson said. Some Democrats now want to
raise the target number of Syrian refugees from 10,000 to as many as 100,000
Syrian refugees, he said.
Congress
has heard reports of counselors “just overwhelmed with the number of people
applying for visas, and needing to be screened,” Hudson said. Pushing 1,500 Syrians per
month through a cheesecloth-like process already requiring between 18 and 24
month is “an absolute recipe for disaster, and I hope it’s not going to take
some terrible incident to wake people up,” he added.
Jim
Hanson, executive vice president of the Washington, D.C.-based Center for
Security Policy, told CJ that identities
and backgrounds of Syrians cannot be verified in most instances, regardless how
many times interviews are conducted. He called Syria a non-functioning state with no U.S. embassy, government offices that
have been ransacked, and official records and databases that have been
destroyed or are missing.
Jimmy
Broughton, McCrory’s deputy chief of staff, on Nov. 18 told the Joint
Legislative Committee on Government Operations “the difficulty of thorough
background checks was again confirmed” by the White House in a Nov. 17
teleconference with the nation’s governors and their staffs.
Frank
Perry, secretary of the state Department of Public Safety, told the Gov Ops
committee that collaboration between federal agencies and state intelligence
personnel authorized to receive all sensitive information collected about the
refugees “simply doesn’t exist. [That’s] sad as to how they are not
communicating” at state and federal levels.
Perry said
he believes some of the Syrian refugees already in North Carolina could present a threat.
“Alerts
are going out as we speak that are serious,” but not imminent,” he said. “There
are people here who seriously mean to harm us.”
State Rep.
John Szoka, R-Cumberland, a retired Army infantry officer in whose district Fort Bragg is located, issued a stark warning
at the Gov Ops meeting.
“Make no
mistake, ISIS is our enemy,” Szoka said.
“They’ve told us that they are our enemy. In fact, in North Carolina they’ve told us that Fayetteville and New Bern are targets that they want to
hit.”
Ben Ferro
(Editor, InsideINS.com)
benferro@insideins.com
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