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Excerpt:
The beleaguered forces of CBS News appear to have completely given themselves over to open-borders advocacy. In an outrageous report, correspondent Lilia Luciano showcases an app designed to track ICE activity, thus helping illegal aliens evade detention and deportation.
Watch as Luciano uses a sympathetic alien in order to sell the app to viewers:
LUCIANO: Oscar works legally in the U.S. with Temporary Protected Status, driving horses across the country. He says TPS offers little protection from the threat of an ICE arrest and indefinite detention.
OSCAR: I feel like somebody is behind me, even I don’t do nothing wrong.
LUCIANO: To do his job, Oscar relies on this app called Coqui that shows him if ICE agents are nearby.
OSCAR: ICE presence in 15 minutes from here right now.
LUCIANO: He spotted ICE activity as he was hauling horses from New York City to South Carolina.
OSCAR: In this case I just have to take another road.
LUCIANO: Coqui is one of several apps developed recently to let immigrants know when ICE agents are nearby. Deputy Director of ICE Madison Sheahan told us she thinks the apps are dangerous.
MADISON SHEAHAN: Our issue becomes- is when they become violent and are asking people to go cause violence.
LUCIANO: So the apps are used to alert immigrants where ICE is. Those people are not going to be targeted.
SHEAHAN: Well, if it is impeding a law enforcement effort, that’s where that line comes in, as well.
LUCIANO: So who is behind developing these apps? We came to one farm in New York State to meet with an unlikely founder.
PETER: People feel like they’re being hunted.
LUCIANO: Peter, who asked us not to use his last name, runs an animal rescue and developed the Coqui app. Why did you decide to create this app?
PETER: There is the desire to protect the people that you love, but there’s also a very practical reason. We need help here, and we need workers to get to work.
LUCIANO: People weren’t showing up to work?
PETER: Correct. The people were scared to leave their homes.
