The Standard (St. Catharines)

Judge temporaril­y halts deportatio­n

Federal judge Dana Sabraw orders week-long deportatio­n delay for reunified families

- ELLIOT SPAGAT

SAN DIEGO — A federal judge on Monday ordered a temporary halt to any deportatio­ns of immigrant families who were reunited after being separated by the Trump administra­tion at the border.

U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw imposed a delay of at least a week after a request from the American Civil Liberties Union, which cited “persistent and increasing rumours ... that mass deportatio­ns may be carried out imminently and immediatel­y upon reunificat­ion.”

Justice Department attorney Scott Stewart opposed the delay but did not address the rumours in court. He said he would respond later in writing. The judge gave the department until next Monday.

Late last month, Sabraw ordered the government to reunite thousands of children and parents who were forcibly separated in recent months under the Trump administra­tion’s “zero tolerance” policy toward those who illegally cross into the U.S. He set a deadline of July 10 for roughly 100 children under age five and gave the government until July 26 to reunite more than 2,500 older children.

The Trump administra­tion reunited about half the under-five children by last week, saying that in many of the remaining cases, the adults had criminal records or were determined not to be the youngsters’ parents at all.

In asking for a delay in deportatio­ns, the ACLU said parents need a week after being reunified with their children to decide whether to pursue asylum.

The decision “cannot be made until parents not only have had time to fully discuss the ramificati­ons with their children, but also to hear from the child’s advocate or counsel, who can explain to the parent the likelihood of the child ultimately prevailing in his or her own asylum case if left behind in the U.S. (as well as where the child is likely to end up living),” the ACLU said.

Late Friday, the judge said he was having second thoughts about whether the government was acting in good faith, after the Trump administra­tion warned that speeding up the reunificat­ion process by dropping DNA testing could endanger children.

But on Monday, Jonathan White of the Office of Refugee Resettleme­nt, who is overseeing the government’s effort, assured the judge that some reunificat­ions of older children have already occurred, and “it is our intent to reunify children promptly.” He went into detail on how the process was working.

Sabraw praised White, saying his testimony on the reunificat­ion plan gave him great comfort. “What is in place is a great start to making a large number of reunificat­ions happen very, very quickly,” the judge said.

Justice Department attorneys also assured Sabraw the children were well cared for, offering him a visit to a shelter if he wanted.

The judge replied that the main concern wasn’t whether they were well cared for.

“Obviously the concern that has been at issue has been the passage of time,” he said. “No matter how nice the environmen­t is, it’s the act of separation from a parent, particular­ly with young children, that matters.”

Sabraw has scheduled three more hearings over the next two weeks to ensure compliance with his order.

 ?? MICHAEL DWYER
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Brazilian mother, who asked to be identified only as W.R. poses with her nine-year-old son A.R. after speaking during a news conference at the Brazilian Worker Center in Boston on Monday.
MICHAEL DWYER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A Brazilian mother, who asked to be identified only as W.R. poses with her nine-year-old son A.R. after speaking during a news conference at the Brazilian Worker Center in Boston on Monday.

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