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Wednesday, September 27, 2023

Cartels use military tactics to siege US

Mexican cartels are behind the thousands of migrants flooding over the US border — with sources saying it shows exactly how much power they wield, border sources tell The Post.

“They have a lot of power; they’re the most powerful organization in Mexico,” former Texas Congresswoman Mayra Flores told The Post Tuesday.

“They’re better funded than our own Border Patrol agents.”

Border towns like Eagle Pass and El Paso, both in Texas, have seen mobs of more than 2,000 migrants at once turning themselves over to Border Patrol over the last week and overwhelming field agents, which the agency has now said the cartels are behind.

“They’re using military tactics, the same way we do,” retired Border Patrol chief Thaddeus Cleveland told The Post.

When a specific city sees an increase in migrants crossings Border Patrol have to pull resources from other areas to respond, but that leaves remote regions with less staff, making it less secure and giving cartels the opportunity to take adventage and move criminals or drugs across the border, Cleveland explained.

“Border Patrol [are] overwhelmed by the staggering amount of people who continue to come over, but that goes to show you that the Mexican cartels control the border.

“They dictate our operational response. They know that we’re still the greatest country in the world and will ensure [migrants’] rights. The cartels are clearly dictating on a daily basis how Border Patrol operates.”

The helicopter for US Customs and Border Patrol, the parent agency of the US Border Patrol, pushed migrants back towards Mexico near El Paso, Texas.
Migrants trapped by razor wire on the bank of the Rio Grande as they try to make their way into Eagle Pass, Texas
REUTERS
Former Texas Rep. Mayra Flores told The Post that Mexican cartel’s are using military tactics to overwhelm the border with migrants.
AP Photo/LM Otero

Not only are criminal organizations south of the border manipulating how the US Border Patrol and sister agency Office of Field Operations allocate their resources, they can also affect vital international trade.

During the surge last week, international bridges were shut down so agents, who normally inspect cargo or people legally coming and going between the US and Mexico, could help Border Patrol screen illegal immigrants.

In tiny Eagle Pass, which has a population of 28,000, the mayor told The Post their bridge closure cost the town $15,000 a day.

It also meant goods coming from Mexico to the US, like car parts, were stuck in transit.

A South Texas resident and wife of a Border Patrol agent, Flores pointed to how cartels make an estimated $13 billion a year by smuggling migrants into the US alone.

In some areas of the border, cartels have total control over who can cross according to Border Patrol sources.

Border agents arrest migrants who had crossed into the US illegally in Sanderson, Texas.
Daniel William McKnight
A smuggler helping migrants cross into the US illegally at Lukeville, Arizona.
DANIEL WILLIAM MCKNIGHT
Migrants took advantage of huge open floodgates to cross into the US illegally at Lukeville, Arizona, in August.
James Breeden/Shutterstock for NY Post

“East of El Paso, no one comes over unless you pay the cartels,” an agent, speaking on condition of anonymity, said.

“That area is really bad right now because south of the border, there’s cartel infighting, so migrants might end up having to pay twice to get across.”

But illegal immigrant smuggling is just a side hustle compared to where the money made from smuggling drugs.

Flores said the cartels are better funded than the US Border Patrol.
AP Photo/Amanda Andrade-Rhoades

While there is no official total as to how much cartels make selling drugs to Americans, estimates range as high as $500 million a year — more money than Walmart makes — according to the Washington Post.

Cartels even disrupt legitmate businesses too. In the last two years, they have expanded by trying to force bribes from Mexico’s fisheries and avocado farmers.

Cartel thugs threatened United States Department of Agriculture workers inspecting avocados last year — causing the US to ban imports of the fruit until Mexico could assure safety to those inspecting the produce.

“They’re just taking over [Mexico.] There’s no longer going to be a government [there] at some point,” Cleveland added.

A bloodied border patrol officer after an altercation with a man who had crossed into the country illegally.
@griffjenkins/Twitter
The man resisted when he was caught by border patrol. He was marked for death with ‘rat’ tattooed into his head by the cartel.
@griffjenkins/Twitter

This week, the ruthless cartels put their disregard for human life on full display. First, a Border Patrol agent in Texas was attacked and bitten by a cartel member who crossed into the US — leaving the agent bloodied and injured.

The defector had been labeled a “rat” by the cartel, which had etched the word onto his forehead.

“What I’m upset about is the Biden Administration says nothing. No acknowledgement, doesn’t come out and say, ‘We will not allow this. We will hold accountable anyone that attacks our Border Patrol agents,'” Flores fumed.

And on Tuesday a two-month old baby was abandoned by smugglers near Rio Grande City, Texas.

“This is a chilling reminder of how children as being exploited by human smugglers and criminal organization every day,” the agency posted online.

Despite the strong grip the Mexican mafias have on the border, Flores blamed US policies for the border crisis.

“It’s the Biden Administration’s policies that are bringing millions of people to this country because when you’re being told that if you come to the United States illegally you will be allowed to stay, you will risk everything to come here,” she said.

https://nypost.com/2023/09/26/cartels-use-military-tactics-to-siege-us/

States would be forced to recover staggering $11B in food stamp overpayments under proposed law

 A proposed law would force states to recover billions of dollars from waste and fraud in the federal food stamps program that were ignored during the COVID-19 pandemic.

A staggering $11 billion in overpayments were delivered to recipients in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), also known as the food stamps program, according to 2022 federal data — up from $3.4 billion in 2019.

Nearly 80% of improper payments were the result of errors made by the state agency.

But the US Department of Agriculture and states that administer food stamp aid to recipients all but abandoned clawing back the funds since 2019 — before the COVID-19 pandemic, said Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa).

The feds exempted states from even reporting data on overpayments and error rates in 2020 and 2021 during the outbreak.

The overpayment rate skyrocketed nationally from 6.18% in 2018 to 9.84% in fiscal year 2022.

In New York, the overpayment rate was even higher — surging from 5.9% in 2019 to 10.35% in 2022.

Ernst said the true cost is unknown because overpayment errors totaling $54 or less per recipient are exempt from collection.

In New York the overpayment rate went from 5.9% in 2019 to 10.35% in 2022.
Christopher Sadowski

The senator’s bill would require states to recover all the overpayments to recipients and pay the federal government what it owes.

The bill also requires that all SNAP payment errors be reported, regardless of the amount.

Ernst even suggested states may be pocketing some of the funds.

“Families across the country are going hungry while bureaucrats are jumping the line to gobble up SNAP dollars, either as a meal ticket to beef up state budgets or a self-serve buffet of benefits for themselves or others who do not qualify,” Ernst told The Post.

“I’m snapping back! It’s time for states at fault to pay the piper and eat the costs of their taxpayer waste. Instead of over-serving bureaucrats, let’s end the waste and set a place at the table for hungry families.”

Food stamp spending and enrollment exploded amid the pandemic.

Ernst said that it is time for “states at fault to pay the piper and eat the costs of their taxpayer waste.”
REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein

In 2022, there were more than 41 million Americans on food stamps, compared to about 35 million people in 2019.

During the same four-year period, spending on food stamps grew to a record-high $119.5 billion, up from $60 billion in 2019. 

Food stamp spending nearly doubled, despite only 6 million additional enrollees, an analysis by the Foundation for Government Accountability said.

Monthly food stamp benefits in New York are a maximum of $740 for a family of three, $939 for a family of four, $1,116 for a family of five and $1,339 for a family of six. 

“Food stamp fraud costs taxpayers millions and diverts resources from the truly needy. Congress should pass basic program integrity measures to prevent fraud before it happens,” the FGA said.

New York has had its share of people ripping off the food stamp program, including government workers.

A law proposed by Sen. Joni Ernst would require states to recover $11 billion of waste in the federal food stamps program that were ignored during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Christopher Sadowski

An employee of the city’s Human Resources Administration was nabbed in 2017 for using inside knowledge to create fake accounts and stole more than $225,000 in food stamps and other benefits over seven years, the state inspector general reported.

Two city HRA workers were also busted in 2015 after exploiting flaws in the city’s welfare system to swipe $2.1 million worth of food stamps and rental subsidies — and then spent $120,000 on Red Bull, authorities at the time said.

The Department of Agriculture declined to comment on Ernst’s SNAP accountability bill.

But in a June statement, it acknowledged that states were not required to issue overpayments or error rates in the food stamp program in 2020 and 2021 during the pandemic.

“USDA is committed to supporting states in improving payment accuracy in SNAP to ensure the program effectively and efficiently serves those who need it and promotes good stewardship of taxpayer dollars,” the agency said.

“We are doubling down to work with state partners to find ways to decrease payment errors and tackle the issues aggressively at their root cause. Together, we will continue to move toward a stronger, efficient, more modern future for SNAP and those it serves.”

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul’s office had no immediate comment.

https://nypost.com/2023/09/26/states-could-be-made-to-recover-11b-in-food-stamp-overpayments/

Tuesday, September 26, 2023

Volkswagen to temporarily cut production of two EV models due to weaker demand

 Volkswagen will suspend production of ID.3 and Cupra Born electric cars at its Zwickau and Dresden plants in Germany in the first two weeks of October due to weaker demand, a spokesperson for the carmaker said on Tuesday.

Due to the current market situation, vehicle production will be reduced during the autumn holidays in Saxony from Oct. 2 to Oct. 13 at Volkswagen's Zwickau plant, the spokesperson said. Germany's dpa news agency first reported the news.

Production of the ID.3 model in Dresden will be suspended from Oct. 2 and resume from Oct. 16 onwards.

Volkswagen declined to comment on the number of employees affected. The carmaker said earlier this month that it would not extend the fixed-term contracts of 269 employees at its all-electric Zwickau plant.

The German carmaker is facing rising competition from Tesla and a growing array of Chinese automakers, as well as dampened demand in the European EV market due to high inflation and cuts to subsidies.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/volkswagen-temporarily-pause-production-two-160657498.html