The FBI is trying to locate more than 12 migrants from Uzbekistan who were released into the U.S. after receiving help at the nation’s southern border from a smugger tied to the Islamic State group, CNN reported Tuesday.
The migrants were permitted to enter the United States after seeking asylum this year, according to the report.
Their smuggler is believed to be an independent contractor of the Islamic terrorist organization.
A classified intelligence report circulated among Biden administration Cabinet officials in a morning briefing book, and urgent meetings were held between top national security and administration officials, according to CNN.
“Intelligence reporting alerted us to a human smuggling network working to facilitate the travel of Uzbek nationals to the United States,” National Security Council spokeswoman Adrienne Watson said in a statement to the Daily Caller News Foundation.
“As with all identified human smuggling networks — which seek to prey on the vulnerable and evade nations’ legal systems — the U.S. government immediately took steps to successfully disrupt it,” Watson told the DCNF.
“There was no indication — and remains no indication — that any of the individuals facilitated by this network have a connection to a foreign terrorist organization or are engaged in plotting a terrorist attack in the United States,” she said.
The group of migrants didn’t set off any alarms when they were screened and released from federal custody this year after crossing the southern border, according to CNN.
The FBI solicited the help of the Turkish government, which arrested the smuggler and other members of the smuggling network, the report said.
In recent years, federal authorities patrolling the U.S.-Mexico border have recorded an illegal immigration surge.
In fiscal year 2022, the Border Patrol recorded more than 2.2 million migrant encounters, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection data.
The agency already has recorded 1.6 million migrant encounters between October 2022 and July, according to CBP.
The Border Patrol also saw a spike in arrests of individuals whose names appeared on the terror watchlist, jumping from 15 in fiscal 2021 to 98 in fiscal 2022 and 146 in the first 10 months of fiscal 2023, according to federal data.
The overwhelming nature of the surge is the perfect opportunity for bad actors to enter the U.S., former Border Patrol Chief Rodney Scott previously told the DCNF.
“Anybody that doesn’t think that serious threats to this country are sneaking in right now is naïve,” Scott said.
The FBI and Department of Homeland Security didn’t immediately respond to the DCNF’s requests for comment.
Fox News White House correspondent Peter Doocy pressed White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre on Tuesday about reports of an ISIS sympathizer smuggling illegal migrants into the United States.
“How is it possible that an ISIS sympathizer is sneaking people into this country?” Doocy asked.
“The intelligence alerted us to a human smuggling network. We moved fast and successfully to disrupt it. So I just want to be very clear of that we are moving—” she began.
“You say you disrupted it. Are you saying you know where all of the people this ISIS sympathizer snuck into the country are?” Doocy asked.
“If I can answer the question, I’m sure I’ll touch on everything you want to ask me,” Jean-Pierre said.