TSA agents have been allowing illegal migrants to board flights and travel around the country without ID, it has been claimed.

According to the union National Border Patrol Council, which represents Border Patrol Agents, TSA employees at two airports in Texas have allowed migrants to use a Notice to Appear form as identification to board planes across the country and have not insisted on any other type of documentation.

Border patrol agents say they themselves witnesses migrants being let through with the form at El Paso Airport and a spokesman for the union claims to have been told that the same thing is happening at Laredo Airport.

Border Patrol agents claim TSA staff at Laredo airport in Texas have been letting migrants through without the proper ID

This is a sample of the I-862 form that the agents say the migrants have been getting by using as their ID

'Late last week, we were told by border patrol agents in Laredo, Texas that they had observed TSA accepting I-862 notice to appear in court documents from illegal aliens who had just been released from border patrol custody, and allowing them to fly.

'A couple of days ago, we found out the same type of situation was occurring in El Paso.

'We did receive reports that in El Paso, illegal aliens were walked around security, much to the dismay of U.S. citizens who were standing in line waiting to be screened,' Shawn Moran, vice president of the National Border Patrol Council, told KFOXTV.

Shawn Moran, vice president of the National Border Patrol Council, said it is happening at two airports

Their concern is that the form is easily forged and that it does not come under the list of 15 forms of ID the TSA requires of every other flyer.

Ordinarily, when migrants are released by ICE they turn to Greyhound or other cross-country bus services to get to the cities they intended to reach when they crossed the border until they have their asylum hearing date.

In these cases, the agents say they have gone to airports instead to board flights.

It is unclear who has paid for their tickets or when they have been purchased.

In most other cases, volunteer organizations or the families of those detained put up the cost of their travel but for those in ICE custody, it is not clear cut when they will be released.

Despite not having any of the 15 types of identification that TSA requires.

A TSA spokesman told DailyMail.com that 'all travelers are required to provide proper documentation prior to flying'.

'CBP, ICE and TSA have been working together for years, ensuring that those who are leaving detention facilities are provided with the proper documentation, or given additional information about proper documentation at that time,' it said in a statement.

'TSA has always had protocols in place for those that are unable to produce documentation and need to travel. However, we expect the vast majority of travelers to appear with one of the documents listed on our website.'

ICE and the National Border Patrol Council did not respond to repeated requests for comment.