Federal agents raid suspected ‘maternity hotels’ in California

LOS ANGELES, (Reuters) – Federal agents raided about 20 Southern California locations yesterday suspected of involvement in “maternity tourism” schemes providing travel, lodging and medical care to pregnant foreign women seeking to give birth in the United States, immigration officials said.

Authorities say the so-called maternity hotels targeted in the sweep catered largely to wealthy women from China who paid $15,000 to $80,000, depending on services offered, in hopes of obtaining U.S. citizenship for their children. The locations searched included three apartment complexes – one each in Los Angeles, Orange and San Bernardino counties – suspected of housing foreign clients, according to the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, or ICE.

No criminal arrests were anticipated from yesterday’s raids, which were carried out by federal agents and local law enforcement, said Claude Arnold, special agent in charge of the Homeland Security Investigations office in Los Angeles.

The sweep was believed to mark the first such enforcement action against a cottage industry that has gained a growing foothold in the United States in recent years while operating largely out of sight of federal authorities, he said.

The U.S. Constitution grants citizenship to any child born on U.S. soil, regardless of parentage, and immigration experts say there is nothing inherently illegal about women coming from abroad to give birth in the United States. But operators of the maternity hotels are suspected of obtaining non-immigrant U.S. visitor visas under false pretenses, as well as engaging in tax fraud, money laundering and other offenses, Arnold said.

Any women encountered in the raids were to be interviewed, and those identified as potential material witnesses instructed where and when to report for further questioning, ICE said.

Businesses engaged in maternity tourism, also known as “birth tourism,” are believed to have been operating for several years, relying on websites, newspaper advertising and social media to promote their services, immigration officials said.

As part of the package, clients were promised they would receive Social Security numbers and U.S. passports for their infants, ICE said, documentation the mothers would take with them when they returned to their home countries.