/WH Quietly Resumes Its Charter Flights Of Underage Migrants

WH Quietly Resumes Its Charter Flights Of Underage Migrants

The White House has restarted its after-dark charter flights of minors to a town north of New York City.

At 9:25 p.m., a group of migrant youths disembarked from an Avelo Airlines jet that had arrived at the Westchester County Airport in White Plains. Thursday. After that, the party boarded three waiting buses, which left approximately 50 minutes later.

One bus was dispatched to the Walt Whitman Service Area in Cherry Hill, New Jersey, which is located immediately across the Delaware River from Philadelphia. At roughly 12:45 a.m., the bus arrived. Several teenagers exited on Friday, got their belongings from the luggage compartment, and left with adults who had been waiting for them.

Around 1:05 a.m., the bus left the rest stop. and then took the New Jersey Turnpike south.

According to internet flight records, the jet that arrived in Westchester took out from El Paso International Airport in Texas and stopped in Jacksonville, Florida.

The Washington Post reported in October on a series of identical flights that revealed how the government was transporting migrant minors to suburban New York in the midst of the ongoing humanitarian crisis at the Mexican border.

Astorino, a Republican gubernatorial candidate, also accused Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul of being complicit in this, adding that the state budget just adopted permits illegal individuals 65 and older to seek for state-funded Medicaid coverage.

Astorino, who has made migrant flights a central campaign issue, believes the border shuttle resumed service last month.

According to an Immigration and Customs Enforcement source, planes to other airports around the country were never halted, regardless of what transpired in Westchester.

Department of Homeland Security warned last month that with the expected May 23 relaxation of a federal restriction known as Title 42, which permits for the rapid removal of adult migrants in the event of a public health emergency, that number may rise to as high as 18,000 people. The policy’s implementer, the Centers for Disease Control, declared last month that unaccompanied migrant youngsters would be spared from deportation.

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