US Border Patrol Investigate ‘Disturbing’ Secret Facebook Group
US officials
are investigating a secret Facebook group where border patrol members allegedly
posted racist and sexist jokes about migrants.
The private
group had about 9,500 members, including former and current border patrol
agents, ProPublica reported.
Some posts
mocked migrant deaths, while others targeted Latino members of Congress,
ProPublica said.
The Border
Patrol chief has called the posts "completely inappropriate".
"Any
employees found to have violated our standards of conduct will be held
accountable," Carla Provost said.
The group
was called "I'm 10-15", ProPublica said - 10-15 being Border Patrol
code for "aliens in custody".
According to
ProPublica, members of the group mocked Latino members of Congress who visited
migrant detention centres in Texas on Monday.
Democrats
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Veronica Escobar were among those said to be
targeted, with members calling them "hoes" and "scum
buckets".
In one post,
a member reportedly suggested throwing burritos at them, while another depicted
a doctored image that showed Ms Ocasio-Cortez performing a sex act.
The BBC was
not able to independently verify the existence of the private group, which is
not publicly accessible on Facebook.
Matthew
Klein, an assistant commissioner at the CBP, said the Department of Homeland
Security has launched an investigation into the group, which violated the
agency's code of conduct.
He said a number
of CBP agents may be members of the group, without elaborating on their roles.
Ms
Ocasio-Cortez said the posts did not surprise her, saying it was
"indicative" of what she saw while visiting migrant detention centres
on Monday.
On Twitter,
she claimed that border patrol officers had told women in cells to "drink
out of the toilets".
"I see
why CBP officers were being so physically and sexually threatening towards
me," she tweeted after the trip.
The CBP has
not officially responded to her comments.
However, a
DHS official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told the Washington
Post that drinking water was available, and no border agent would force
migrants to drink from a toilet.
Ms
Ocasio-Cortez and other lawmakers toured detention centres days after a
harrowing picture of a drowned man and his daughter in the Rio Grande brought
the migration crisis into sharp focus.
Ms
Ocasio-Cortez said the posts did not surprise her, saying it was
"indicative" of what she saw while visiting migrant detention centres
on Monday.
On Twitter,
she claimed that border patrol officers had told women in cells to "drink
out of the toilets".
"I see
why CBP officers were being so physically and sexually threatening towards
me," she tweeted after the trip.
The CBP has
not officially responded to her comments.
However, a
DHS official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told the Washington
Post that drinking water was available, and no border agent would force
migrants to drink from a toilet.
Ms
Ocasio-Cortez and other lawmakers toured detention centres days after a
harrowing picture of a drowned man and his daughter in the Rio Grande brought
the migration crisis into sharp focus.
Since taking
office in 2017, US President Donald Trump had adopted tougher policies in an
attempt to reduce the number of undocumented migrants.
Earlier this
month, Mexico reached a deal with the Trump administration to try to stem the
flow of undocumented migrants travelling to the US.
Since then,
deportations and detentions of undocumented migrants have reportedly increased.
In February,
Mr Trump declared an emergency on the country's southern border, saying it was
necessary to tackle what he said was a crisis there.
Last week,
the US Congress approved a $4.5bn (£3.5bn) humanitarian aid package for the
US-Mexico border.
FROM .bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada
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