Right-wing media outlets are amplifying a long-debunked myth that all people who migrate to the United States are getting prepaid debit cards loaded with $5,000. The claim resurfaced thanks to Pinal County Sheriff Mark Lamb, who made the charges on Fox News and on X (formerly Twitter) in a post that also included a link to a donations page for his Senate run.
Contrary to Lamb’s assertion, Newsweek reported that there “does not appear to be any U.S. government program that gives undocumented migrants $5,000 gift cards.” Pablo De La Rosa, a freelance border reporter with NPR and Texas Public Radio, wrote that Lamb’s claim “isn’t true.”
Although versions of this myth have circulated for years, Lamb — a far-right figure who has appeared on QAnon shows and pushed election denialist conspiracy theories — appears to be channeling misinformation produced by anti-migrant propagandist Todd Bensman in early September. Bensman, a senior fellow at nativist think tank the Center for Immigration Studies, incorrectly asserted that all migrants crossing the border were getting $2,200 monthly cost of living checks courtesy of the Biden administration and their NGO partners, based on a single interview with a Border Patrol agent. He further claimed that parents coming over the border would divide their children and apply for these cards as separate families, thus further gaming the system.
Bensman admitted at the time that he hadn’t verified his claims, but he nonetheless spread it on War Room, the podcast of former Trump adviser Steve Bannon, and other platforms. Experts fact-checked him in real time, but his false claims spread across right-wing media and were further amplified by Reps. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) and Matt Gaetz (R-FL).
The Washington Post debunked Bensman’s semi-viral misinformation, and an Associated Press fact check further corrected the record as recently as October. As AP notes, it is true that some non-government organizations work with the State Department to provide some refugees — a legally distinct status — with a one-time cash payment, but both Bensman and Lamb’s claims are a wild distortion of that much narrower point. In general, migrants who cross the U.S. border without authorization are not eligible for federal benefits.
On December 5, Lamb echoed these unsupported claims on X, while also painting migrants as threats to public safety and as scapegoats for poverty in the country. Lamb’s sourcing for his claims is opaque; he appears to mainly be escalating the falsehoods that Bensman spread earlier this year.
“When these folks come across, and they’re processed, they’re being given a cell phone; a plane ticket to wherever they want to go in this country, so probably to a community near you; and a $5,000 Visa card,” Lamb said.
“So while this Christmas season you’re struggling to keep your lights on, while you’re struggling to pay your rent, put Christmas presents under the tree for your kids, we have our government giving people who came into this country illegally $5,000 gift cards,” he continued. “That’s the truth, folks.”
It isn’t, but that didn’t stop Lamb from repeating his comments nearly verbatim the following day on Fox & Friends First.