Subject: Most of the $33
Billion in Remittances to Mexico Flow Via U.S. Govt. Banking Program, From:
"JW Corruption Chronicles" media@pr.judicialwatch.org. 4/10/19.
Though President Trump
said he would block money transfers to Mexico to fund a much-needed border
wall, Mexicans in the U.S. sent a record $33.48 billion in remittances last
year and a big chunk of it flowed through a government program operated by the
Federal Reserve.
This means that, amid an
onslaught of illegal immigration, the U.S. government is largely responsible
for the billions in remittances flowing south of the border from illegal
aliens. Figures released by Mexico’s central bank show that 104 million
transactions were executed in 2018, nearly six million more than the previous
year.
Uncle Sam facilitates
the process with a program called “Directo a Mexico” (Direct to Mexico),
launched by the Federal Reserve, the government agency that serves as the
nation’s central bank, more than a decade ago. President George W. Bush came up
with the idea following the 2001 U.S.-Mexico Partnership for Prosperity to
provide low-cost banking services to illegal immigrants and facilitate the
procedure for those sending money home.
In its first year, 2005,
remittances to Mexico topped $20 billion and the Federal Reserve reports
“double-digit percentage growth for the past several years.” Remittances are
transferred through the Federal Reserve’s own automated clearinghouse linked
directly to Mexico’s central bank (Banco de Mexico). The Trump administration
should eliminate it because it undermines our nation’s immigration laws and is
a potential national security nightmare.
Back in 2006 Judicial
Watch investigated the outrageous taxpayer-subsidized initiative and obtained
government records that shed light on how it functions. Marketing materials
target immigrant workers in the U.S.—regardless of their legal status—as well
as banks, credit unions and other financial institutions.
The program is promoted
as “the best way to send money home,” offering “more pesos for every dollar.”
American financial institutions are charged $0.67 per item to transfer money
from the United States to Mexican banks, ensuring a “highly competitive rate.”
The Federal Reserve also provides participating U.S. financial institutions
with Spanish language promotional materials to “help get your message out.” The
marketing materials also include the number of Mexican migrants in the U.S. with
no distinction between those here illegally or not. A separate list identifies
thousands of Mexican banks receiving “Directo a México” transfers.
When the program was
created Federal Reserve officials acknowledged that most of the Mexican
nationals who send money back home are illegal immigrants so a Mexican-issued
identification is the only requirement to use the government banking service. A
colorful brochure promoting “Directo a Mexico” offered to help immigrants who
don’t have bank accounts and assured the best foreign exchange rate and low
transfer fees.
A frequently asked
question section posed this: “If I return to Mexico or am deported, will I lose
the money in my bank account?” The answer: “No. The money still belongs to you
and can easily be accessed at an ATM in Mexico using your debit card.” In
short, the U.S. created this special banking system specifically for illegal
aliens and tens of billions of dollars have streamed through it.
As a presidential
candidate Trump proposed a plan to get Mexico to fund a border wall by cutting
off remittance payments from Mexican migrants in the U.S. In a memo to a
mainstream newspaper Trump wrote that Mexican migrants send $24 billion in
remittances annually and the estimated cost of a border wall would be between
$5 billion and $10 billion.
According to his plan,
the U.S. Patriot Act would be amended to block wire transfers from Mexican
nationals using companies such as Western Union. Nowhere in the document is the
Federal Reserve’s special program, which clearly caters to illegal immigrants.
The president is well aware that the overwhelming majority of remittances to
Mexico are sent by those living in the U.S. illegally.
In fact, his proposal
was to create a rule that “no alien may wire money outside of the United States
unless the alien first provides a document establishing his lawful presence in
the United States.” The Federal Reserve’s
“Directo a Mexico” has no such requirement as the commander-in-chief completes
his first term.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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