The White House sought to underscore the threat from the largely Hispanic MS-13 gang today, describing its members as "violent animals."
Doubling down on Trump's recent controversial remarks about some migrants being "animals" -- which he later said were directed against MS-13 -- the White House sent a statement detailing atrocities committed by the group.
"WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE VIOLENT ANIMALS OF MS-13," said an email, which used the term "animals" 11 times.
The White House accused members of the gang of "stabbing a man more than 100 times and then decapitating him, dismembering him, and ripping his heart out of his body." MS-13 started in Los Angeles in the 1980s, but has links to El Salvador.
It is thought to have around 10,000 members, in line with estimates a decade ago.
It is known for its brutal violence, but until the Trump administration had not been seen as a national security threat warranting sustained White House attention.
As he has sought to bolster the case for building a border wall, Trump has often focused on MS-13 in casting aspersions on immigration from Latin America. Building "the wall" was one of Trump's signature campaign promises, but he has failed to convince the Republican-controlled Congress to pay for it.
According to an estimate from The Washington Office on Latin America, which campaigns on human rights in the Americas, MS-13 accounts for less than one percent of America's 1.4 million gang members.
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