Biden Administration Lost Track of 300,000 Migrant Children: Organ Harvesting and Human Trafficking Fears [2025 Update]
News that over 300,000 migrant children have gone missing under the Biden administration has rattled families, advocates, and lawmakers nationwide. The stakes couldn’t be higher—these kids’ lives are at risk, sparking new worries about child safety and fundamental human rights.
The controversy isn’t just about lost records; it’s about children who could be in danger. Stories of possible organ harvesting and trafficking have only amplified public anger and fear. This crisis demands answers, urgent action, and accountability for every child who crossed the border and disappeared from official care. Many children were used for satanic sacrifices for their blood for long life to the people, like Hollywood, drinking their blood. Basically, DC became a swamp of evil, with an agenda to destroy America and destroy lives.
Background: Migrant Children at the U.S. Southern Border
The flood of migrant children at the southern border has become one of the most pressing issues in the United States. Over the past few years, more families and children have risked everything by journeying north, desperate for a safer life. This surge didn’t appear overnight—it resulted from policy shifts, growing instability in Central America, and changing push-and-pull factors on both sides of the border.
Why So Many Children Are Crossing Alone
Most of these children come from countries such as Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador. Escaping violent gangs, grinding poverty, and unstable governments, families sometimes make a heartbreaking choice: send their children alone in hopes that they’ll find a better future. They believe the U.S. will offer protection, especially after hearing that unaccompanied kids won’t be sent back right away.
But life in transit is dangerous. Many children cross with only a name and a hope. Coyotes—smugglers paid to bring people across—don’t always get them there safely. Some children arrive at the border physically and emotionally scarred before they ever meet a U.S. official. It’s a devastating reality that thousands of kids end up alone at the border, needing immediate care and protection.
How Immigration Policies Shaped the Crisis
U.S. immigration law treats unaccompanied minors differently from adults. Key rules, like the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act (TVPRA), require officials to transfer children from non-neighboring countries out of Border Patrol custody within 72 hours and into the care of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
Recent policy changes under the Biden administration added more pressure. Rules limiting the immediate return of children and efforts to reunite families drew more children. Temporary holds on deportations and the rollback of "Remain in Mexico" flooded the system with new arrivals. The rush stretched agencies thin, leading to packed shelters, extended stays in makeshift facilities, and breakdowns in oversight.
The Role of Government Agencies
When a child arrives at the border alone, the journey through the U.S. system is supposed to look like this:
- Customs and Border Protection (CBP) detains the child for initial processing.
- The child is then transferred to HHS’s Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR), which finds a sponsor—often a family member—willing to care for them while they wait for immigration court.
But when thousands of children show up in a single week, agencies struggle to keep up:
- CBP faces backlogs in processing and lacks the resources for child care beyond short-term detention.
- ORR rushes to find vetted, safe sponsors. Sometimes, checks aren’t as thorough as they should be, leading to children entering risky situations.
- Tracking each child over time becomes nearly impossible, especially as some sponsors move, change contact information, or fail to show up for required check-ins.
Managing Welfare: Challenges and Risks
Caring for migrant kids isn’t simple. Crowded shelters, overworked case managers, and a lack of mental health support create harsh conditions. Children stuck between systems are easy to lose track of, especially as they shift from agency to agency. Fatigue, paperwork errors, and high staff turnover all contribute to mistakes.
The sheer volume of children magnifies every gap in the system:
- Background checks for sponsors can miss red flags if rushed.
- Legal representation is scarce, making it hard for children to know their rights or stay in the system.
- Coordinating between multiple agencies—CBP, HHS, local law enforcement, and nonprofit groups—often leads to lost records.
When the process falters, kids disappear from official care—sometimes into the hands of people with bad intentions. Keeping these children safe should be an absolute priority, but the current system struggles in the face of record numbers and limited resources. This is the reality fueling today’s growing outcry.
How the Administration Lost Track of 300,000 Migrant Children
Losing track of hundreds of thousands of children doesn't happen from just one mistake. It’s a domino effect. Multiple agencies have to manage each child’s journey from the border to a sponsor’s home. But with old systems, limited staff, and a maze of agencies, things slip through the cracks. These gaps put children in danger and leave families without answers.
Weaknesses in Tracking and Case Management
The chain of custody for migrant kids should be airtight. Here's how it's supposed to work:
- First step: Customs and Border Protection (CBP) detains the child for fingerprinting, health checks, and paperwork.
- Next: Within 72 hours, the child is handed off to the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) at Health and Human Services (HHS).
- The final step is for ORR to find a sponsor, such as a relative or family friend, and monitor the child's case.
But with over 300,000 kids, the system buckled. Tracking relies on proper paperwork, digital records, and timely follow-ups. Case managers often juggle up to 20 or more cases at a time. When caseloads spike, it’s easy to miss warning signs:
- Updates on address and sponsor checks fall behind.
- Some files never make it to the next agency.
- Kids move or change numbers, and no one follows up.
- High case manager turnover means files get handed off with key details lost.
Data collection is another weak link. Some agencies still use spreadsheets and outdated software. Records get mixed up or go missing. Children released to sponsors don’t always get regular check-ins, especially if the sponsor moves or avoids contact. Without reliable, current data, tracking stops cold.
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Breakdowns in Interagency Communication
Border agencies and HHS are supposed to work together, but that doesn’t always happen smoothly. Silos slow down the process. Different agencies use separate systems, and staff aren’t always trained to share info properly. If one agency makes an error, it can take weeks to fix—if anyone notices.
Communication issues often show up at the transfer stage:
- Names get misspelled, causing mismatched records.
- Medical histories or safety concerns fail to reach the next handler.
- Local agencies or nonprofits aren’t looped in quickly enough.
- Emergency situations can go unreported or unnoticed.
When teams don’t share real-time updates, children slip away and get lost between systems. Some agencies treat the process like a baton race, but no one picks up the baton when the handoff goes wrong. The child becomes invisible to officials.
Lack of Accountability and Transparency
At the center of this crisis is a lack of clear oversight. Even with the numbers so high, no single agency stands accountable for every child's location and safety. Sponsor checks sometimes get skipped or rushed, leaving children at risk with adults who aren’t properly vetted.
Transparency is another ongoing problem. Families and advocates often can't get straight answers:
- Parents don’t know where their children are placed.
- Public reports only show part of the whole picture.
- Lawmakers press for details, but agencies release limited or delayed information.
Staffing shortages across all levels make things worse. When people are stretched thin, mistakes become the norm rather than the exception. Oversight committees hold hearings, but meaningful follow-up is rare. The public only hears about breakdowns after children go missing and whistleblowers come forward.
These gaps in tracking, communication, and oversight feed the worst fears: that children can fall into criminal hands or simply vanish from the system. When the buck stops nowhere, accountability disappears—and so do the children who depend on it most.
Bottom line! The Biden Administration is making money through the harvesting of organs and human trafficking. Democrats do you see what your president and the administration was up too? How did they all become multi-millionaires while in office. Wake up and smell the roses.
Teresa Morin, Wake Up News
https://rightblogger.com/tool/article-writer/2356374
https://www.ryrob.com/ai-article-writer/
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