[Pages S515-S516] From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov] Border Security Mr. President, Joe Biden's reckless border policies have allowed human trafficking and smuggling to grow into a $13 billion industry, with criminal cartels earning up to $14 million every day for trafficking families, women, and children into the country. I want to be crystal clear about what is happening here. This is not some sort of humanitarian mission. The cartels are not doing this out of the goodness of their hearts. These are violent criminals who have figured out how to make millions of dollars every single day. They are kidnapping young girls and exploiting them for sex and labor over and over again. The left wants you to believe this is a myth or that reports of trafficking and exploitation are exaggerated, but while I was down at the border, I heard from two women who can provide a mountain of evidence to the contrary. Former Mexican Congresswoman Rosa Maria de la Garza joined us to talk about her advocacy on behalf of the survivors of this horrific abuse. She has been dedicated to this all her life. She puts her time into preventing and targeting human trafficking in her own country, and she has seen firsthand the ease with which the cartels use our open border to make a buck and how they expand the slave trade into our country, profiting from it. We also had the chance to speak with Karla Romero, who is a survivor of cross-border sex trafficking. Karla fell into the hands of her captors when she was 12 years old and was enslaved as a sex-trafficked individual for 4 years. During that time, she estimates that she was raped over 40,000 times--a child in the hands of a cartel. That is what they did to her. This is a humanitarian catastrophe that is enabled not only by the Biden administration's refusal to secure the border but by incentives buried in the law that encourage criminal behavior. At the end of last year, the Justice Department committed over $90 million in funding to combat human trafficking. It is an incredible investment of taxpayer resources. But, unbelievably enough, the American people are subsidizing the lifestyles of these criminals even as they invest millions to bring down these trafficking rings. As it stands right now, the law allows accused traffickers to live in government housing and receive government benefits even after they are apprehended by law enforcement and charged with a crime. If we are going to get serious about combating trafficking at the border, we need to eliminate this incentive for illegal conduct. I know it seems unbelievable that you have these cartels members who are getting U.S. Government benefits, living in government housing, and getting unemployment checks, but it is happening. The ``Remain in Mexico'' policy is a prime example of how successful tactics can work. By requiring asylum [[Page S516]] seekers to stay in Mexico while awaiting a court date, we ensured that migrants weren't rewarded for illegally crossing the border. These programs work, and that is why I, along with Senator Hyde-Smith and Senator Britt, introduced the Stop Taxpayer Funding of Traffickers Act. It makes clear that anyone charged with drug or human trafficking at our border cannot receive Federal Government benefits until their case is resolved. It would block them from receiving any retirement, welfare, Social Security, health, or disability benefits. It also means that traffickers would not be able to receive a grant, contract, loan, or professional or commercial license from the U.S. Government. This is something that needs to happen. Prohibiting traffickers from receiving taxpayer funds is just plain common sense, and there is no reason why this legislation shouldn't pass the Senate immediately. I can't imagine that anyone would be for allowing these drug traffickers and sex traffickers to continue to live in government housing and receive these benefits. In the same way that drug traffickers are directly profiting from the opioid epidemic that has killed millions of Americans, human traffickers are reaping the rewards of this administration's complacency. It is time to start paying attention to some of the details of what is happening at our southern border. The American people are paying attention, and they are waiting on this President and on this body to join them in doing something about it. I yield the floor. I suggest the absence of a quorum. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll. The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll. Ms. CANTWELL. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call be rescinded. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.