U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service (CIS) employees face 2,500 misconduct charges, including bribery and exchanging immigration benefits for sex
Stephen Dinan:
The agency charged with admitting immigrants to the United States is in disarray, an internal investigator told closed congressional briefings last week, with employees facing thousands of charges of misconduct and having to make decisions on letting in foreigners without knowing whether there are national security risks.
Two sources familiar with the briefing said U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service (CIS) employees face 2,500 misconduct charges, including bribery and exchanging immigration benefits for sex. There are also charges that some employees are being influenced by foreign governments.
"The thing that took most of the oxygen out of the room was the realization that there is the distinct possibility that people who have terrorist backgrounds have been able to obtain green cards because of a lack of ability to check their backgrounds," said one of the sources.
The sources said there were two briefings, including one to several members of the House. The sources spoke on the condition they not be named, because the briefing was closed. Both also declined to name the internal investigator who briefed Congress, citing fears of government retaliation against him.
CIS is part of the Department of Homeland Security, taking over the benefits part of the defunct Immigration and Naturalization Service. The enforcement side of INS was split between U.S. Customs and Border Protection and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
The 2,500 accusations of misconduct at CIS, among 15,000 federal and contract employees, are just the cases that have been turned over to CIS's internal-affairs bureau and might not be the complete list, the sources said. New charges are added at a rate of about 50 per week.
The agency's internal-affairs bureau lacks the manpower and resources to tackle those cases and, in some cases, is being blocked by some superiors, the briefer told Congress.
"The lack of resources to investigate serves to embolden these corrupt public officials," the second source said. "They have no fear of being caught."
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