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The vice president : “the crisis is real,” – Migrants shout as Pence visits Texas detention centers

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Face of Nation : Vice President Mike Pence saw firsthand the extreme overcrowding migrants are often forced to endure at federal detention centers when he visited two Friday in Texas.

Agents wore face masks, and video showed detainees packed into their holding areas surrounded by chain-link fence, the concrete floors littered with silver thermal blankets. Reporters accompanying Pence described the facility as smelling “horrendous.”

A group of men detained behind chain link fencing shouted to news cameras, “No shower, no shower!”

Pence said afterward that what he saw was evidence of a “system that was overwhelmed.”

The experience did not appear to temper a statement he made earlier in the day that reports of mistreatment, filthy conditions and lack of basic necessities were “slanderous.”

The vice president, flanked by Sen. Lindsey Graham. R-S.C., and officials from the Department of Homeland Security, repeated the words, “the crisis is real,” in referring to illegal border crossings and legal asylum claims at the border.

“But what’s not real,” he said, “is the slanderous allegations of heartless mistreatment by Customs and Border Protection. I can see it in your eyes, I can hear it in your voice, about the care and concern.”

He refuted the description, used by U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and other Trump critics, of detention facilities as “concentration camps.” “Every family that I spoke to told me that they are being well cared for,” he said.

Pence bolstered his claim by asking a group of migrants at the Donna facility, likely Spanish speakers, if “they’re taking good care of you here.” Most nodded.

Hope Frye, a San Francisco immigration attorney who said she has toured all the federal migrant facilities in the Rio Grande Valley, was adamant that conditions have been deplorable.

“The idea that this is false or exaggerated is really offensive to me,” she said. “It’s like saying migrants’ voices are untrue. It all paints the same picture — depraved indifference to the safety and welfare of children who come to us and are put in our care.”

In May, the Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Inspector General wrote an internal report stating that conditions were so bad at an El Paso, Texas, border facility, where about half the migrants in custody were sleeping outdoors, that agents there feared possible rioting.

Pence acknowledged there was overcrowding at some detention facilities, but he argued that it was simply more evidence the government faced a true crisis at the border.

At the roundtable, Homeland Security and U.S. Border Patrol officials recounted stories of “recycled children” used by migrants in attempts to gain entry to the United States, false asylum claims and sick migrant children rescued and cared for.

Rodolfo Karisch, chief U.S. Border Patrol agent for the Rio Grande Valley Sector, said more than 30 migrants a day were sent to hospitals for various injuries, ailments and conditions.

South Carolina Republican Graham called U.S. Border Patrol agents “every bit” the patriot that U.S. soldiers fighting overseas are. “I don’t know what we pay you,” he said, “but it’s not enough.”

Like Pence, he laid overcrowded conditions at detention facilities, filled in part with families fleeing poverty and gang violence in Central America, at the feet of congressional Democrats. “The problem we have here can be fixed, literally overnight,” Graham said.

He sought support for his own legislation that seeks to force asylum seekers to apply for American safe harbor at home, immediately deport unaccompanied minors and increase detention time for migrant children