The primary focus of the initiative will be to carry out welfare checks on nearly half a million children to ensure they are living safely and are not subject to any exploitation, DHS said.
The department blamed the Biden administration’s open border policies for having “empowered” human traffickers and sex traffickers and stated that the Trump administration is taking a “sledgehammer” to such trafficking rings.
The UAC Safety Verification initiative kicked off on Nov. 10 in Florida and will soon roll out to other parts of the country, DHS said in its recent statement.
Among the many sponsors already arrested by ICE for criminal activity are a Honduran immigrant sponsor from Florida who has been convicted by state authorities for assault, a Guatemalan sponsor from Georgia convicted of domestic violence by authorities, and an El Salvadoran sponsor from Michigan who was convicted of drug trafficking.
“[DHS Secretary Kristi Noem is] leading efforts to rescue and stop the exploitation of the 450,000 unaccompanied children the Biden administration lost or placed with unvetted sponsors,“ DHS Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs Tricia McLaughlin said. ”Many of the children who came across the border unaccompanied were allowed to be placed with sponsors who were smugglers and sex traffickers.”
McLaughlin said that the Trump administration has so far located more than 24,400 of these children across the country.
“We’ve jump-started our efforts to rescue children who were victims of sex and labor trafficking by working with our state and local law enforcement partners to locate these children,” McLaughlin said.
As of May 2024, this included more than 32,000 children who were served notices to appear in court but failed to do so. The safety of an additional 291,000 children could not be verified, according to the report.
The Trump administration has faced legal challenges regarding illegal unaccompanied minors.
When unaccompanied children enter the country, they are initially placed in shelters operated by the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) and later released to family members or vetted sponsors and not ICE’s detention centers, the council said, adding that these policies “recognize that children need care and support, not punishment.”
“Locking up these young people in ICE jails rife with overcrowding and hazardous conditions, and far from their support systems, does nothing to make our communities safer; it only inflicts more harm on vulnerable youth,” Michelle Lapointe, legal director at the council, said.
The emergency request was granted by the court.
The responsibilities regarding the care and custody of these minors lie with the ORR, an agency under the Department of Health and Human Services, it said.
“In accordance with the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act (TVPRA) of 2008, ERO coordinates closely with inter-departmental partners to ensure the timely and safe transfer of unaccompanied alien children from DHS to HHS ORR custody,” the agency said.







