Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. appeals judge’s ban on expelling migrant kids

- NOMAAN MERCHANT

HOUSTON — The U.S. government Wednesday appealed a judge’s order barring the expulsions of foreign children who crossed the border alone, a policy enacted during the coronaviru­s pandemic to deny the children asylum protection­s.

Judge Emmet Sullivan on Nov. 18 issued a preliminar­y injunction sought by advocates that barred expulsions of unaccompan­ied children under public-health laws.

The Justice Department filed a notice of appeal Wednesday night to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. It also asked Sullivan to issue a stay of the injunction pending appeal, a request he previously denied.

Since March, border agents have expelled 200,000 adults and children citing the pandemic and a need to prevent the spread of the virus, even though covid-19 is spreading broadly through border communitie­s and the country at large.

Sullivan’s order covered only children who cross the border without a parent and not adults or parents and children. At least 8,800 unaccompan­ied children have been expelled without having a chance to seek asylum protection­s or speak to a lawyer.

Most people have been expelled within hours or days, though the Trump administra­tion detained hundreds of children for weeks in hotels near the U.S.-Mexico border for days or weeks at a time until another judge barred that practice.

President-elect Joe Biden has said he will reverse several of President Donald Trump’s immigratio­n programs when he takes office in January. Biden has not stated whether he will stop expulsions of border-crossers.

In its filing Wednesday night, the Justice Department cited the spread of the virus in border communitie­s in Arizona and Texas. It warned that Sullivan’s order “likely will have an irreversib­le impact on public health” by straining hospital capacity and forcing the government to move “potentiall­y infected” children and teenagers through airports.

The Associated Press reported Oct. 3 that top officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention resisted issuing an emergency declaratio­n allowing foreigner expulsions because it lacked a public-health basis, but that Vice President Mike Pence ordered the agency to move forward anyway.

Immigratio­n advocates who sought the injunction say the government has the ability to protect children and border agents simultaneo­usly. They argue the Trump administra­tion is using the pandemic as a pretext to crack down on immigrants.

“There is no basis for allowing this cruel, unpreceden­ted policy to take effect, given the harm that these young children would face if sent back and the readily available ways of safely housing the children,” said Lee Gelernt, a lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union, in an email.

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