Pennsylvania GOP Rep writes to Homeland Security secretary demanding to know why flights with hundreds of migrants are being flown into Biden's hometown of Scranton in the middle of the night

  • Rep. Dan Meuser is demanding answers from DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas and Acting ICE Director Tae Johnson after flights of migrants arrived in Scranton
  • 'Pennsylvanians deserve to know about these decisions affecting their community, and I expect immediate answers,' Meuser wrote in his letter 
  • Meuser said at least 130 migrants were sent to Scranton, while another former Pennsylvania lawmaker claimed there were 180
  • Lawmakers say they were not informed before the flights arrived in Scranton, Pennsylvania – the town where Biden was born and lived until he was 10

GOP Rep. Dan Meuser is demanding answers after the administration sent flights of migrants to Pennsylvania in December

GOP Rep. Dan Meuser is demanding answers after the administration sent flights of migrants to Pennsylvania in December

A Republican Pennsylvania lawmaker is demanding answers from the administration after Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) chartered flights to send at least 130 migrants to Joe Biden's hometown of Scranton.

'I am extremely concerned by recent reports that the federal government has flown illegal immigrants to the Wilkes Barre-Scranton International Airport (AVP),' Representative Dan Meuser from Pennsylvania wrote to Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas and ICE Acting Director Tae Johnson.

'It is my understanding that a total of 130 immigrants, 118 minors and 12 adults, arrived aboard an iAero charter flight on Friday, December 17 and were subsequently transported on buses from a private hangar,' the Republican congressman added in his letter last week. 'This flight seems to have occurred without airport officials receiving notice or a passenger manifest.'

A former Pennsylvania lawmaker now running for governor, Lou Barletta, suggested the December 17 chartered flight could have carried as many as 180 illegal immigrants.

Barletta said Sunday that there were two more 'secret planes' from El Paso, Texas that landed in Scranton on Christmas with even more migrants.

The transportation of migrants has been described as 'ghost flights' due to the secrecy surrounding them, including impromptu flights arriving in the middle of the night without a public manifest of passengers.

Meuser, whose district falls on the outskirts of Scranton, said that Pennsylvania lawmakers and officials were not informed of the flights and he is questioning whether Scranton is the final destination for these migrants.

Biden was born in Scranton and often refers to it lovingly as his hometown. But the president moved from Pennsylvania when he was 10 and lived in Delaware from there on.

Meuser said at least 130 migrants were sent to Scranton, while another former Pennsylvania lawmaker claimed there were 180. Pictured: Haitian migrants cross into the U.S. from Mexico on December 27 to claim asylum to Border Patrol agents in El Paso, Texas

Meuser said at least 130 migrants were sent to Scranton, while another former Pennsylvania lawmaker claimed there were 180. Pictured: Haitian migrants cross into the U.S. from Mexico on December 27 to claim asylum to Border Patrol agents in El Paso, Texas

'Pennsylvanians deserve to know about these decisions affecting their community, and I expect immediate answers,' Meuser wrote to DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas and Acting ICE Director Tae Johnson

'Pennsylvanians deserve to know about these decisions affecting their community, and I expect immediate answers,' Meuser wrote to DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas and Acting ICE Director Tae Johnson

Meuser claims his constituents have questions surrounding the migration influx to Scranton that he is unable to answer without proper communication from the White House and their imigration and national security agencies.

U.S. Congressman Matt Cartwright, a Democrat, represents the district that encompasses Scantron. His office did not address a DailyMail.com inquiry of whether Cartwright was made aware of the flights before they arrived in his district.

Cartwright's office did, however, send along a statement from the Democratic representative saying: 'These are legitimate concerns and we've been looking into it.'

'We know that during the last two administrations, federal agencies have responded to overcrowding issues by relocating unaccompanied children to the custody of properly screened family members, host sponsors, and charitable institutions,' he added, without clarifying if he knew that flights of migrants were headed to Scranton.

On the other hand, Republican Meuser said the 'lack of communication and transparency surrounding this process is unacceptable.'

'Pennsylvanians deserve to know about these decisions affecting their community, and I expect immediate answers,' he wrote to Mayorkas and Johnson, along with a series of nine questions. 

Mike Howell, who helped lead the DHS oversight counsel under Trump, told DailyMail.com that the agency is 'acting as travel agents who distribute illegal aliens around the country wherever they wish to go.'

'This is just one part of the administration's open-borders agenda, and is a clear constitutional abuse meant to alter the electorate in a swing state in a way the administration believes will benefit the left,' said Howell, who serves as a senior advisor for government relations for the conservative think tank the Heritage Foundation.

'Hopefully some brave patriots at DHS will come forward to Congress as whistleblowers to tell the truth,' he added.

The relocation of migrants, mostly minors, comes as the Biden administration was forced to restart its Migrant Protection Program, otherwise known as Remain in Mexico policy. The Donald Trump-era program has the U.S. send migrants who entered illegally through the southern border back to Mexico to await court dates for asylum proceedings.

It also comes as the administration reallocated projects from the Pentagon to DHS to allow for the agency to plug gaps in Trump's border wall and improve security in more vulnerable areas of the southern border.

Customs and Border Protection data shows that officers encountered more than 1.75 million migrants at the southern border since Biden took office.

Asylum-seeking migrants from Haiti prepare to cross the Rio Bravo river to turn themselves into Border Patrol agents in El Paso, Texas on Monday

Asylum-seeking migrants from Haiti prepare to cross the Rio Bravo river to turn themselves into Border Patrol agents in El Paso, Texas on Monday

CBP data released in December shows there were 173,620 encounters with migrants at the southern border in November, an uptick from October when crossings finally were on a decline from the massive summer surge

CBP data released this month shows there were 173,620 encounters with migrants at the southern border in November, an uptick from October when crossings finally were on a decline from the massive summer surge

Numbers released this month show the agency's officers encountered 173,620 illegal crossers in November alone – an uptick from the October crossings of 164,753.

The November figures represent a 140 per cent uptick in illegal crossings from the same month last year, when there were only 72,113 encounters.

According to the Center for Immigration Studies report on the Census Bureau's monthly Current Population Study (CPS), immigrants made up 14.2 per cent of the U.S population as of November 2021.

This amounts to 46.2 million immigrants – both illegal and legal – living in the U.S.

The latest figure is the highest the proportional U.S. immigrant population has been in 111 years. It is also triple the share of the population since 1970 and double since 1990.

Some Republicans critical of Biden's border policies have suggested that migrants be sent to towns where Democrats would feel the burn – like Biden's hometown of Wilmington, Delaware or Martha's Vineyard, where the Obama's own a house.

Pennsylvania gubernatorial candidate and former Representative Lou Barletta also is demanding answers about the flights to his state.

On Thursday, the day before Christmas Eve, Barletta pressed Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf and Attorney General Josh Shapiro, both Democrats, for answers about the flights.

'It is extremely difficult to adequately screen people and conduct a thorough background check when they have entered the country by illegal means,' Barletta said.

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