The Frank
Home
Today's Fastrack
About
Subscribe
Homan: 25K Missing Migrant Children Found

Homan: 25K Missing Migrant Children Found

author
author

The Frank Staff

The Frank Staff.
[email protected]
@TheFrank_com
The Frank Staff
author

The Frank Staff

The Frank Staff.
[email protected]
@TheFrank_com

Sep 23, 2025

·

0 min read

Share options

Email
Facebook
X
Telegram
WhatsApp
Reddit

Nearly 25,000 missing illegal immigrant children in the United States have been identified by the Trump administration, border czar Tom Homan said this past week.

“When President Trump called me to come back from retirement, he told me they wanted me to do three things—secure the border, run the largest deportation operation the country’s seen, and third, find over 300,000 missing children. And that was priority one,” Homan said in a Sept. 18 interview with Fox News.

“So, they’ve already located just under 25,000. Some of these children were fine, with parents just hiding because they didn’t want to be deported.”

“But many were in sex trafficking. Many we found in forced labor, slavery. I mean forced to work ungodly hours, not going to school,” he said.

They were “not getting paid, being abused.”

Homan said he and President Donald Trump are committed to looking for these missing children and “run down the leads” until every one of them is found.

“And unfortunately, 27 of these children have since died. So, we’re not giving up. This is the main priority for the Trump administration. We'll keep going at it,” he said.

In November 2024, after Trump’s election, Homan said that his agency would prioritize locating or rescuing the 300,000 illegal immigrant children.

An August 2024 report from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Office of Inspector General (OIG) found that 323,000 illegal immigrant children were unaccounted for in the United States. These were children who illegally entered the United States and are considered at risk of exploitation.

As of May 2024, this included more than 32,000 children who were served notices to appear in court but failed to do so. In addition, the safety of another 291,000 children could not be verified, the report said.

In a September 2024 post, the American Immigration Council, an advocacy group, questioned the figures.

“These media reports are misleading—ICE is the immigration enforcement agency whose mission is to remove individuals, including children, who do not have a legal basis to remain in the United States,” the post said.

“It is not a child welfare agency, and it did not ‘lose’ these children. The OIG report reflects paperwork gaps, not lost children.

“The lack of a current address on file does not mean that the children have been trafficked, are lost, or that their parents or sponsors are purposely evading immigration proceedings. Quite the contrary, a majority of the children may be residing in loving homes, attending school, and acclimating to their new surroundings after being reunited with family members in the United States.”

Meanwhile, illegal immigration numbers have plummeted under the Trump administration.

“Daily Southwest Border encounters have plunged by 93 percent since President Trump took office,” said an Aug. 15 statement from the DHS.

“The number of nationwide apprehensions in July was also a historic low of just 6,177. Notably, on July 20, Border Patrol recorded only 116 apprehensions nationwide—the lowest single-day total in agency history.”

Abuse in Sponsorship

In a June 5 post, the DHS said it had uncovered widespread abuse and exploitation of illegal minors who were placed with “improperly vetted sponsors.”

Special agents found some of these sponsors possessed child sexual material, the agency said. Some of them forced minors into labor, while others subjected the children to neglectful living conditions.

“Children’s safety and security is nonnegotiable,” said ICE spokesperson Laszlo Baksay.

“The previous administration’s failure to implement meaningful safeguards has allowed vulnerable kids to fall into the hands of criminals.

“Our special agents are working tirelessly to locate these alien children, ensure their protection, and hold accountable those who have abused the system.”

Several sponsors were found to have committed serious crimes such as prostitution, drug trafficking, aggravated assault, hit-and-run, larceny, and attempted murder, the DHS said. In some instances, girls were impregnated by their sponsors.

To ensure the well-being of unaccompanied illegal immigrant children, special agents from ICE’s Homeland Security Investigations have been conducting welfare checks, it said.

The visits are aimed at assessing whether the children are receiving appropriate care and not being trafficked or abused, the agency said.

Share options

Email
Facebook
X
Telegram
WhatsApp
Reddit

US Seizes Oil Tanker Off Venezuela

Dec 11, 2025

2 min

Dem Files Impeachment Articles Against RFK Jr.

Dec 11, 2025

1 min

Erika Kirk Slams Owens for Spreading Conspiracies

Dec 11, 2025

2 min

Minnesota: Most Somali Household on Welfare

Dec 11, 2025

2 min

Fed Cuts Rates by 25 Points

Dec 11, 2025

4 min

House Passes $901B Military Defense Bill

Dec 11, 2025

2 min

UK: 2 Teen Migrants Jailed for Rape

Dec 11, 2025

4 min

Dem Wins Miami Mayor Race After 28 Years

Dec 10, 2025

2 min

Trump to Zelensky: Accept Peace Deal by Christmas

Dec 10, 2025

3 min

Ellison Wants to Turn CNN Into Fox Competitor

Dec 10, 2025

4 min

1 Killed, 1 Injured in Kentucky State University Shooting

Dec 10, 2025

1 min

Tony Dokoupil Named CBS Evening News Anchor

Dec 10, 2025

3 min

Appeals Court Upholds Trans Military Ban

Dec 10, 2025

3 min

Judge Will Release Maxwell Grand Jury Docs

Dec 10, 2025

1 min

Mamdani Crime Adviser is Convicted Robber

Dec 10, 2025

2 min

Report: Trump Considering Replacing Noem at DHS

Dec 8, 2025

1 min

Mamdani Gives Advice On How To Evade ICE

Dec 8, 2025

2 min

Russia Rapidly Gaining Territory in Ukraine

Dec 8, 2025

3 min

Black Man Acquitted of Stabbing White Man

Dec 8, 2025

2 min

Cinnabon Employee Fired for Calling Somali Couple N-Word

Dec 8, 2025

1 min

  • Today's Fastrack
  • About
  • Contact
  • Policy & Terms
  • Recaptcha