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No Coyote Cash Act
12/15/2023, 4:05 PM
Summary of Bill S 381
If passed, the No Coyote Cash Act would make it illegal for individuals or organizations to pay coyotes for their services. This is in response to the belief that paying coyotes only encourages and perpetuates the dangerous practice of human smuggling, putting individuals at risk of exploitation and harm.
The bill includes provisions for increased penalties for those found guilty of violating the law, as well as measures to increase border security and enforcement efforts to prevent human smuggling and trafficking. Supporters of the No Coyote Cash Act argue that it is necessary to combat the growing problem of human smuggling and trafficking, which poses a serious threat to national security and the safety of individuals seeking to enter the United States. Opponents of the bill, however, raise concerns about the potential unintended consequences of criminalizing payments to coyotes, such as driving the practice further underground and making it more difficult to track and prosecute those involved in human smuggling. Overall, the No Coyote Cash Act is a controversial piece of legislation that seeks to address a pressing issue in US immigration policy. Its fate in Congress remains uncertain as lawmakers continue to debate its merits and potential impact.
Congressional Summary of S 381
No Coyote Cash Act
This bill makes it a crime to transmit money or any item of value with the intent to finance the unlawful entry of a non-U.S. national (alien under federal law) into the United States. Violators are subject to a fine equal to the value of the transmitted property, up to one year in prison, or both.
Additionally, the bill makes a non-U.S. national who violates this prohibition inadmissible and deportable.
Current law criminalizes certain conduct related to bringing a non-U.S. national into the United States and transporting, harboring, concealing, or shielding such an individual within the United States from detection by immigration authorities while knowing or in reckless disregard that the individual entered unlawfully.





