🔍How this was checked: The bot searched the web (20 searches), cross-referenced 8 sources, and assessed each claim individually.
The post's central claim that the Biden administration released 2.7 million unaccompanied alien children is dramatically false; official data and even conservative sources place the total number of unaccompanied children encountered during the Biden years at roughly 475,000–550,000. The DNA testing claim conflates a separate border program for adults arriving with children (family units) with the unaccompanied children program, and the specific figures of 300 tests and 15% fraud are unverifiable and inconsistent with available data.
Verified against · 8 sources
Claim by claim
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✗ False
The Biden administration released 2.7 million unaccompanied alien children.Official CBP and HHS/ORR data, as well as statements from conservative organizations and the current DOJ, place the total number of unaccompanied children encountered during the Biden administration at approximately 475,000–550,000. The 2.7 million figure appears to conflate total nationwide border encounters (which exceeded 11 million) with the specific subset of unaccompanied children. Even the Heritage Foundation, the apparent source of this post, has separately cited a figure of 'over 550,000' unaccompanied children.
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! Misleading
More than 80% of them were teenage boys over age 14.Historical CRS and ORR data show that unaccompanied children are predominantly male (roughly 70–75%) and that the median age is around 16–17. While a large majority are teenage boys, the specific claim of 'more than 80%' overstates the documented proportion. The 70–80% figure for teenage boys has been cited in other contexts (e.g., European asylum seekers by Pew Research) but does not precisely match U.S. ORR demographics.
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✓ Confirmed
They were released to people claiming to be their family members inside the United States.Under the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act (TVPRA), unaccompanied children are transferred to HHS's Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR), which seeks to release them to sponsors—typically parents or other relatives already in the U.S. This is standard, legally mandated procedure.
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! Misleading
DNA testing was used in only 300 cases.Familial DNA testing (Rapid DNA) was a CBP program used to verify parent-child relationships for adults arriving WITH children at the border ('family units'), not for unaccompanied children released to sponsors. The program was discontinued in May 2023 when CBP's contract expired. The '300 cases' figure is unverifiable and conflates two entirely different populations. A 2019 pilot detected over 1,000 fraudulent family relationships, and a 2022 DHS OIG report noted CBP had conducted 'almost no' familial DNA testing for unaccompanied children specifically.
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Unsupported
Fraud was found in 15% of those DNA tests.Available data from the 2019 Rapid DNA pilot found that approximately 24.7% of tested family units could not be verified as biological parent-child relationships. The 15% figure does not match published results. Furthermore, this statistic applies to family-unit fraud detection at the border, not to the vetting of sponsors for unaccompanied children, making the claim misleading in context.
Caveats
The exact cumulative total of unaccompanied children across all Biden-era fiscal years varies slightly depending on whether one counts CBP encounters, ORR referrals, or releases to sponsors, but all authoritative sources cluster around 475,000–550,000—nowhere near 2.7 million. The DNA testing figures may reference internal or non-public data, but no credible public source corroborates the '300 cases / 15% fraud' claim.
Community note
False. Official data shows roughly 500,000 unaccompanied children were encountered, not 2.7 million. The DNA testing figures incorrectly reference a separate program for adult family units. Releasing minors to vetted sponsors is standard legal procedure.