this country is the highest consumer of child sex and child pornography. the traffickers need these kids to get big money into the united states. this little girl was trafficked through the wallless section of the border. laura: you know that for a fact? absolutely. i know everything about this case. he goes up, forced into new york city and this is hard to hear but this is the facts and this is reality. 30 to 50 times a day raped for money in this country, by american sex, these pedophiles. the sad thing is the wall would have likely saved her. why? the wall is a law enforcement operation. it forces the traffickers to move their people move their kids through a place where there s alert agents, high technology, and these kids can be rescued. at the same time this is happening i was working on a five year old boy who was kidnapped in mexicali by an american trafficker. but there s a wall there. he was forced to move this child through the port of entry. and we caught him.
griff? griff: guys, his name is jobel. a 29-year-old honduran. he was traveling with the 2,000 caravan that ended up in mexicali. apprehended by border patrol just across calexico port of entry. and confirming to customs and border protection that he is indeed a member of the very lethal ms-13 gang. but, as you mentioned, not the only health not the only risk posed to americans. the health issue is big one. this caravan is very, very sick. take a look at these numbers of the 2267 migrants that were treated. we know that over 60% have respiratory infections. we know that there are three confirmed cases of tuberculosis. four cases of h.i.v./aids. 101 cases of lies. and four cases of chicken pox. it is this overcrowding situation that is really making it difficult. this is a space for 1,000 people. got over 6,000 people crammed in there. constant coughing and spitting. i want to show you a little
there guys, there is only 35 bathrooms for it. they have seen home cooking going on in here. it is very, very unsanitary on top of an unhealthy population here. as the rain starts to come down a little bit more this morning. it s expected to go all day long. there are reports that they may try to move this population. we will find out to see what happens. brian: they have to go to a bigger stadium there is concern that more are coming. have you heard there are more caravans coming? griff: we know for sure officials say at least 1,000 to maybe more are coming from southern caravan making its way here. and from mexicali where that ms-13 member was apprehended going across to calexico. those migrants, which was believed to be about 2,000 may be headed this way because they have even worse conditions and less space and resources there in mexicali. steve: it s a desperate situation. let s bring in dr. nicole saphier fox news medical
don t go to the other side to do something bad. i go to work. and work is work. here, there, and anywhere. griff: let s talk about the numbers. some 80 of this group self-deported and the mexican officials deported another 100. 200 have arrived arrived here overnight with some 2,000 possibly coming from mexicali. that s why tijuana officials such as delegate romano blames the organizers for giving migrants force hope. they can t afford it costs some $30,000 a day. he like america is worried about the pasts whether or not it involves criminal pasts in guys like luis. listen. that s what we re worried about. we need to investigate who is in the country and what they want to do here. if they want to work, they are welcome. if not, they have to go back home. griff: yesterday we got an actual list of demands from
there, and anywhere. griff: some aiding this caravan self-deported yesterday and another hundred were deported by mexico after sunday s melee, however, there are 200 more arrived here overnight officials tell us and some thousand or more may be coming from mexicali. the delegate that runs this area says that he believes the organizers of this the caravan are to blame. he says it s a cost that tijuanaese people cannot afford. listen. we need help. this is very costly. it s costing us around 30,000 to $40,000 a day to keep these people here. those funds have to come from some place and it s municipal funds. griff: migrants by the way held a bit of a press conference yesterday and had a list of demands. we will go into that a little bit later. among that they want to end deportations and speed up the asylum process. we will bring that to you in