The smuggling operation highlights ongoing national security threats as thousands of illegal immigrants, including people from terror-linked nations, were brought into the U.S. under the former Biden regime.
| PULSE POINTS |
❓ WHAT HAPPENED: Efrain Zuniga-Garcia, a Mexican national, pled guilty in federal court to smuggling up to 3,000 illegal immigrants into the U.S., including individuals from countries such as Pakistan, Afghanistan, Egypt, and Yemen, some of which have ties to terrorism. The smuggling operation ran from November 2020 to September 2023 and involved stash houses in Monterrey and Piedras Negras, Mexico. 📺 DETAIL: The network also moved migrants from India, Colombia, Guatemala, Honduras, and Ecuador through the stash houses. Zuniga-Garcia pleaded guilty to conspiracy to bring an alien into the United States and bringing an alien into the country for financial gain, and faces a mandatory minimum sentence of three years in prison. Several co-defendants have already been sentenced, including Honduran national Enil Edil Mejia-Zuniga, who received a ten-year prison term in 2025 for directing the operation. Federal prosecutors said the network’s activities raised national security concerns because it facilitated the illegal entry of migrants from countries associated with terrorism concerns. The case comes amid ongoing debate over border security, with the House Homeland Security Committee reporting that Border Patrol encountered about 400 migrants on the U.S. terror watchlist between fiscal years 2021 and the end of the former Biden regime, compared with 14 encounters between 2017 and 2020, during President Donald J. Trump’s first term. The committee also estimated that at least two million migrants classified as “gotaways” entered the country under Biden. 💬 KEY QUOTE: “In an effort to satisfy his greed, Mejia-Zuniga facilitated the illegal movement of thousands of Middle Easterners into the United States. His actions put our national security at risk.” – U.S. Attorney Justin Simmons for the Western District of Texas. |
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