Insider found no evidence that ICE asked states to vaccinate detainees, as the agency claimed.
ICE now says the COVID-19 vaccine rollout included doses for detainees but some states never got the message.
Read the Insider investigation that revealed how federal negligence could leave thousands of at-risk immigrants out of the largest vaccine rollout in history.
US Immigration and Customs Enforcement has reversed its previous claim that it was working with state and local health departments to ensure that the ICE detainee population is included in state vaccination plans, following an Insider investigation that found the federal agency has no plan to vaccinate the almost 14,000 immigrants in its custody against COVID-19.
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Experts say incarcerated people should be among the first to receive the COVID vaccine.
But ICE has no plan to vaccinate detainees, an Insider investigation has found.
Experts raised concerns that thousands of detained immigrants were falling through the cracks.
When US Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents arrested Giovannie Morrison in October, the pandemic was burning through his home state of California. Naturally, he feared catching COVID-19 in a crowded immigration detention center.
A music promoter before the pandemic, Morrison was living in the city of Roseville, near Sacramento, and working as a day laborer. He told Insider that he carried hand sanitizer and wore a face covering everywhere he went.
Indian mobile users browses through the Chinese owned video-sharing Tik Tok app on a smartphones in Amritsar on June 30, 2020. - TikTok on June 30 denied sharing information on Indian users with the Chinese government, after New Delhi banned the wildly popular app citing national security and privacy concerns. Photo by NARINDER NANU/AFP via Getty Images
TikTok has banned content that promotes multi-level marketing companies in a recent community guidelines update.
Multi-level marketing companies recruit people to sell products on commission, and incentivize members to recruit additional participants to buy and sell products, per the Federal Trade Commission.
A 2018 AARP survey found 73% of MLM participants lost money or made nothing.