Tiktok, owned and operated by China, continues to wreak havoc on the US republic. An exclusive report from former Gateway Pundit reporter Tayler Hansen reveals how they allow Mexican drug cartels to smuggle people into America and his report contains surprising information.
Hansen said he recently traveled to McKinney County, Texas to ride with the sheriff’s department. While traveling with Deputy Molinar, Hansen learned how Mexican drug cartels have targeted Americans for smuggling jobs.
Hansen reported:
He showed me an example of an ad on TikTok, and within minutes of searching for myself, I found over a dozen ads blatantly promoting job smuggling for the cartel. While I was working on these ads, I realized that one had an info tag from TikTok that read, “Participating in this activity may cause you or others to get hurt.
As Hansen writes, the video below is a classic example of the human smuggling used by the cartels. It also shows how to smuggle illegal aliens past the border patrol, chats between the smuggler and the organizer, and then the reward that comes after.
Despite this illegal activity, Tiktok allows cartel recruiters to stay on the platform and organize the smuggling operations. Hansen notes that these heinous activities are happening while conservative Americans are being silenced on the platform.
TikTok is known for being the platform with some of the strictest censorship, but despite this, they seem more concerned about Americans expressing their political opinions than organized cartels recruiting Americans to commit multiple crimes through human trafficking.
TikTok enables traffickers to post help wanted ads to recruit smugglers.
Film material: @taylerusa for @TPostMillennial pic.twitter.com/y7sUGW6inv
— The Post Millennial (@TPostMillennial) July 5, 2023
Hansen then spoke to Sheriff Brad Coe, who revealed a shocking piece of information: 99.99% of the smuggling recruits they encounter and arrest are U.S. citizens.
Coe had more surprises, too: These Americans come from all walks of life, from wealthy lawyers to national security guards. Ultimately, the primary motivation is nothing but old-fashioned greed.
We see all walks of life. We have had people who are in pain for money, they are in financial trouble and they want to make easy money. We caught some lawyers who were smuggling.
Recently we caught two girls on active duty, or right now I think they were smuggling National Guard or active duty. So we have seen everything. I checked one child; he was outside the DFW area. Checked to see where he lived, did some background checks. And of course he lives at home, his parents live in a $600,000 house.
So I don’t think he was here for the money; I think he was here for the thrill. And then there are people who want to make a name for themselves, or try to join a gang or do whatever it takes to be part of that clique to make easy money. It’s just not worth it.
WATCH:
Kinney County Sheriff Brad Coe tells @taylerusa “We’ve always seen more people smuggling than drugs” on the US-Mexico border. pic.twitter.com/jXKdy2qAn0
— The Post Millennial (@TPostMillennial) July 5, 2023
Here are four additional examples that Hansen discovered showing how Americans are recruited.
People smugglers promise US drivers to earn $10,000 by picking up illegal immigrants and driving them to their next stop. pic.twitter.com/GcX0JF6FHV
— The Post Millennial (@TPostMillennial) July 5, 2023
Another want ad shows a bunch of people in a car packed with bags full of money emojis. pic.twitter.com/WFUFAvB91y
— The Post Millennial (@TPostMillennial) July 5, 2023
The cartels target Uber drivers, who are already driving around promising big bucks to get illegal immigrants deeper into the country after they cross the border. pic.twitter.com/K54qmPsUPK
— The Post Millennial (@TPostMillennial) July 5, 2023
Luxury goods are also part of the pledge. pic.twitter.com/LzuZpDf8ZV
— The Post Millennial (@TPostMillennial) July 5, 2023
Hansen’s tireless reporting also revealed the huge increase in human pursuits thanks to Tiktok.
Previously, Kinney County averaged one chase per year, while officers averaged two or three chases throughout their careers. Fast forward to now, and some Kinney County Sheriff’s deputies find themselves in two or three chases a night.
In February 2023, there was a high-speed chase every day of the month, with several days on some days. This doesn’t even include the pursuits that Kinney County sheriff’s deputies are assisting the Texas Department of Public Safety with. In 2022, the Kinney County Sheriff’s Department set a record of nearly 200 pursuits in one year.
Hansen then explains how the cartel often manages to evade the police. They use WhatsApp to spy on the smuggler’s live location and drop one location pin at a time.
During the smuggling process, the member of the cartel responsible for the smooth running of the operation monitors the smuggler’s location live and regularly contacts them via WhatsApp. Often they drop one location pin at a time, trying to evade the police who receive information from smugglers who have been caught and arrested.
Another TikTok reveals the way the scheme works, which is that once a driver is hired, they pick up an illegal immigrant and then take them to a specific location as specified by the cartel. pic.twitter.com/wtlWaQFVAf
— The Post Millennial (@TPostMillennial) July 5, 2023
Unlike other platforms, Tiktok makes no effort to remove the content. It’s almost like they want America to suffer.