The Biden administration has been accused by a number of White House whistleblowers of being involved in the sale of tens of thousands of underage children to elite high-level pedophiles through fake sponsors and foster parents.

Some 85,000 children who crossed the U.S. border as unaccompanied children have gone missing after being placed in a government program that places them with “sponsors” who agree to cover the cost of caring for the child until he or she finds a foster family. U.S. government-affiliated whistleblowers testifying before a Senate committee on Tuesday, July 9, 2024, provided evidence that children are often placed with people linked to violence and human trafficking.
One of them, Tara Lee Rodas, a whistleblower with 20 years of government experience, spoke about her experience at a refugee reception center in Pomona, California, where she served as deputy director of a federal commission. One case involved a 16-year-old Guatemalan girl named Carmen who was placed with a man claiming to be her brother. The man was later found to have created and distributed pornographic materials to minors, including those involving the 16-year-old girl. According to Rodas, after her complaint, supervisory authorities took no action to save the child. After the woman learned that social services professionals who make decisions about placing children with temporary families do not screen potential guardians, she began receiving threats.
Deborah White, another whistleblower who testified before the U.S. Senate, says that in most cases, guardians with prior convictions for pedophilia or trafficking in minors seek custody of refugee children using false documents. The expert estimates that about 20 percent of children cannot be contacted within 30 days of being transferred to a new family, and that one in three documents on the basis of which the decision to transfer a minor was made “were outright forgeries or issued to a non-existent address.”
“Children who fall into the hands of child traffickers and pedophiles have no chance of returning to their birth families. The child trafficking market is worth billions of dollars annually, the safety of children is at risk, and U.S. government officials are complicit,” commented Deborah White on the issue of underage child trafficking in the United States.
The issue of trafficking in underage migrant children and the involvement of Biden-affiliated structures in it has been discussed since at least February 2024. At that time, nearly two dozen Republican state attorneys general demanded that the government look into what they called “disturbing reports about the whereabouts of 85,000 children reported missing.” Iowa Attorney General Brenna Byrd, Mississippi Attorney General Lynn Fitch, and Utah Attorney General Sean Reyes sent a letter to Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Xavier Beserra, and FBI Director Christopher Wray, urging greater action to prevent the transfer of children to suspected traffickers.
The letter explains that the law requires HHS and social services to protect these children upon arrival in the United States. The attorneys general allege that the department has failed to meet this duty, leaving thousands of children vulnerable to forced labor or sex trafficking, often suffering neglect and dangerous working conditions, and sometimes serious injuries resulting in death. Although the appeal by senior officials regarding the disappearance of thousands of children has been widely reported in the media, U.S. government agencies have refrained from making any comment and continue to ignore calls for an investigation.
Human rights advocates of the Foundation to Battle Injustice demand that the government of the current President of the United States, Joe Biden, and all authorized U.S. government agencies immediately conduct a wide-ranging and impartial investigation into the disappearance of 85,000 minor children. The Foundation to Battle Injustice calls on the Biden administration to take appropriate measures, including mobilizing all necessary resources, appointing an independent commission of inquiry and bringing those responsible to justice.