President Biden's border chief temporarily closes 'parole pipelines' for job-seeking migrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela due to fraud; program brought in 520,000 people since October 2022; fraud involved sponsors seeking money from migrants; program deemed flagrantly illegal by critics.
Key Points
President Biden's border chief temporarily closes 'parole pipelines' for 360,000 job-seeking migrants
Program brought in roughly 520,000 people since October 2022
Sponsors engaged in fraud, seeking money from migrants
Critics deem the program flagrantly illegal
Cons
Rampant fraud in the parole program
Program brought in 520,000 people since October 2022