WASHINGTON — U.S. Senators Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.) and Ted Cruz (R-Tx.) on Thursday sent a letter to the Secretary of Homeland Security, Secretary of State, and Attorney General demanding the immigration history of the San Bernardino terrorists.
Wednesday morning, Syed Rizwan Farook and his wife Tashfeen Malik killed 14 people and wounded 21 more at the Inland Regional Center in San Bernardino before being killed by police.
Farook is believed to have been radicalized and was in touch with other Islamists known to have been involved in terrorism. Farook also recently traveled to Pakistan and visited Mecca in 2013 on the Hajj, an annual pilgrimage to Mecca that Muslims are required to do at least once in their lifetimes. Malik is a native of Pakistan who came to the U.S. in 2014 on a “fiancée visa.” She later became a permanent resident.
Sessions and Cruz are now pressing the Obama administration to release the details of the killers’ immigration history.
Their letter notes that Congress is days away from consideration of an omnibus year-end funding bill that would set the U.S. on an “autopilot path” to approve green cards, asylee, and refugee status to approximately 170,000 migrants from Muslim countries during the next year. Sessions’ office also asserts that the administration is concealing the immigration history of 72 known, recent terrorists.
In addition to the Sessions-Cruz letter, Senator Sessions, Senator Richard Shelby (R-Ala.) and two congressmen also wrote to Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Sylvia Burwell on Thursday, noting her agency’s failure to “submit an annual report to Congress regarding the activities of the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR), in violation of federal law.”
HHS has seen its budget for refugee resettlement more than double in recent years, up to $1.6 billion in its latest funding request.
The full text of the letter regarding the San Bernardino terrorists reads as follows:
Dear Attorney General Lynch, Secretary Johnson, and Secretary Kerry:
On August 12, we sent a letter requesting that you provide basic information regarding the immigration histories of 72 individuals in the United States who have been identified as having a connection to terrorism over a one-year period. You have failed to comply with the request, sent more than three-and-half months ago.
A response is not only long overdue, but urgent in light of a series of assaults, including: the heinous attacks in San Bernardino, California, the earlier attacks on the military recruiting center in Chattanooga, the Boston Bombing, and Congress’ imminent consideration of government funding legislation that would include funding for myriad immigration programs that have allowed for these events to occur.
Press reports indicate that the alleged perpetrators of yesterday’s attacks, Syed Rizwan Farook and his new wife Tashfeen Malik, wore ‘assault style clothing,’ described as ‘tactical gear,’ and authorities described their home as an ‘IED factory,’ with multiple pipe bombs and small explosives strapped to remote-controlled cars. According to these press reports, Farook is the child of immigrants who came to the United States from Pakistan, and Malik travelled to the U.S. from Saudi Arabia. According to the LA times: ‘Farook recently traveled to Saudi Arabia and returned with a new wife he had met online.’ A CNN report added the following detail: ‘Farook traveled to Saudi Arabia for several weeks in 2013 on the Hajj, the annual pilgrimage to Mecca that Muslims are required to take at least once in their lifetime, which didn’t raise red flags, said two government officials. It was during this trip that he met Malik, a native of Pakistan who came to the United States on a ‘fiancée visa’ and later became a lawful permanent resident.’ Among Muslim nations, Pakistan is the top recipient of U.S. green cards, having received 83,000 between FY09-FY13. Further, according to CBS News, sources say that the two viewed ISIS propaganda online, and separate reports indicate that Farook was in touch with other individuals being investigated for terrorism.
Accordingly, in addition to the previously requested information from our August 12th letter, we demand that you immediately provide the same detailed information requested in that letter for Farook and Malik, which would include the immigration history of their parents and any immigration documents related to their marriage and her subsequent travel to the U.S.
In our struggle against terrorism, we are dealing with an enemy that has shown it is not only capable of bypassing U.S. screening, but of recruiting and radicalizing Muslim migrants after their entry to the United States. The recruitment of terrorists in the U.S. is not limited to adult migrants, but to their young children and to their U.S.-born children – which is why family immigration history is necessary to understand the nature of the threat.
In the first 11 months of this year, we have already identified 12 individuals brought into the country as refugees who have been subsequently implicated in terrorism. Their countries of origin range from Bosnia, to Somalia, to Uzbekistan. These events do not occur in isolation, but tend to be part of broader networks of radicalization and extremism that must be understood as we develop immigration policy.
Congress is days away from consideration of an omnibus year-end funding bill that would set the U.S. on an autopilot path to approve green cards, asylee, and refugee status to approximately 170,000 migrants from Muslim countries during the next year. In addition to that would tens of thousands of temporary visas for entry and employment, and the entire sum is added to the rest of the annual autopilot green card, asylee, refugee, and foreign worker flow. The security task involved is immense, and Congress must have the requested information if lawmakers are to act as responsible stewards of American immigration policy.
We appreciate your prompt attention to this matter. Please contact our staffs if you have any questions regarding this request.
Very truly yours,
Jeff Sessions
United States SenatorTed Cruz
United States Senator