President Joe Biden isn’t doing much to stem the record numbers of illegal immigrants pouring into America across the southern border.
If, however, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement happens to take a pregnant woman into custody and that woman wants to kill her child, the administration will go out of its way to make sure she can.
According to a report Tuesday in The Wall Street Journal, immigration officials have instructed detention centers that pregnant women are entitled to abortions, and if the state they’re detained in prohibits them, they’re to be transferred to another center where the procedure can be performed.
(Here at The Western Journal, we’ve been covering the fallout from the Supreme Court decision overturning Roe v. Wade — as well as all of the ways the Biden administration has sought to circumvent any laws that would restrict terminating unborn life. We’ll keep bringing America the truth that the mainstream media won’t. You can help us by subscribing.)
According to the report, the undated memo was sent from ICE Acting Director Tae Johnson to Corey Price, head of ICE’s enforcement division.
“This memorandum serves as a reminder of existing ICE policies and standards requiring that pregnant individuals detained in ICE immigration custody have access to full reproductive health care,” the memo read.
“This is also a reminder that, pursuant to existing ICE policy, it may be necessary to transfer a detained pregnant individual within an area of responsibility (AOR) or to another AOR, when appropriate and practicable, in order to ensure such access,” Johnson wrote, according to the report.
“An official familiar with the memo said it would likely be sent later this week, and would represent the first law enforcement agency to reinforce reproductive rights in federal custody. ICE detains immigrants in the country unlawfully on civil immigration violations, many of them in the course of their asylum applications,” the Journal reported.
Welcome to America. Now kill your child.
— Jesse ?? (@Route0660) July 12, 2022
In the three weeks since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, 16 states have banned abortion and three more will be banning it imminently, according to a tally by The Washington Post.
In several of those states, the ban has been blocked by court order. However, perhaps most critically, abortion is now illegal in two of the states with the longest land borders with Mexico: Arizona and Texas.
However, as the Washington Examiner pointed out, it isn’t exactly “clear how many women are in ICE detention at present or the extent that Johnson’s memo will be relevant, especially given the Biden administration’s instruction in 2021 that ICE officers avoid arresting and detaining illegal immigrants who are pregnant.”
Save the taxpayers money on transportation – why not just open a Planned Parenthood on the border! ?
ICE to transport pregnant detainees across state lines to facilitate abortions https://t.co/496vF5MDBa
— Kathleen Kelly (@Kat022916) July 13, 2022
“Regardless of a person’s legal status, a child born in the United States is a U.S. citizen, a factor that could impact a woman’s decision to seek an abortion,” it said.
However, the Journal reported, ICE helps obtain abortions for those in custody in the usual triad of exceptional cases — rape, incest or life of the mother — as per the agency’s health guidelines.
“In the event continued detention is necessary and appropriate, and consistent with the practice of our federal partners, if the life of the mother would be endangered by carrying a fetus to term, or in the case of rape or incest, ICE will assume the costs associated with a female detainee’s decision to terminate a pregnancy,” ICE guidelines from 2016 state.
Given that ICE’s established guidelines only allow medical providers to abort an unborn child in those specific instances, the memo represents a considerable expansion of the circumstances under which it will allow abortion to take place.
Subscribe
Gain access to all our Premium contents.More than 100+ articles.