Austin American-Statesman

ALSO INSIDE

Judge orders move after 200 accounts point to problems.

- By Elliot Spagat, Colleen Long and Amy Taxin

A federal judge in Los Angeles said Friday that she will appoint an independen­t monitor to evaluate conditions for immigrant children in U.S. border facilities in Texas after a spate of reports of spoiled food, insufficie­nt water and frigid conditions faced by the youngsters and their parents.

Judge Dolly M. Gee said she reached her decision after seeing a “disconnect” between U.S. government monitors’ assessment of conditions in facilities in Texas’ Rio Grande Valley and the accounts of more than 200 immigrant children and their parents detailing numerous problems.

“It seems like there continue to be persistent problems,” she said during a hearing in a longstandi­ng settlement agreement case focusing on the care of children in government custody. “I need to appoint an independen­t monitor to give me an objective viewpoint about what is going on at the facilities.”

Gee’s decision came as the Trump administra­tion worked to reunite families separated at the U.S.-Mexico border under a second, separate court mandate out of San Diego. Hundreds remained separated as the government worked to clean up the effects of its policy that prompted global outrage and a presidenti­al order halting separation­s.

Peter Schey, an attorney who represents immigrant children detained by the U.S government, said he hopes Gee’s decision will spur U.S border authoritie­s to make improvemen­ts to other centers.

He said in court that problems have worsened with children now spending between three and six days in U.S. Customs and Border Protection facilities, where they were previously held between one and three days.

“We’ve seen an intensific­ation with all the chaos the administra­tion has caused,” Schey, who has long requested an independen­t monitor, said.

Sarah Fabian, a Justice Department attorney, opposed the appointmen­t without having an opportunit­y to respond to the accounts of children and parents collected by immigrant advocates at facilities in June and July. She said that border authoritie­s, for example, provide water fountains and jugs in cells and that facility conditions must comply with agency policies.

“We believe we haven’t had a chance for a full evidentiar­y hearing on this,” Fabian said.

Both sides have until Aug. 10 to agree on a proposed monitor. If they can’t, each will make suggestion­s to the judge and she will choose one.

Earlier Friday, Homeland Security officials said they had reunified all eligible parents with children — but noted many others were not eligible because they had been released from immigratio­n custody, are in their home countries or chose not to be reunited.

More than 1,800 children 5 years and older had been reunited with parents or sponsors as of Thursday. That included 1,442 children who were returned to parents who were in U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t custody, and another 378 who were released under a variety of other circumstan­ces.

But about 700 more remain separated, including 431 whose parents were deported, officials say. Those reunions take more time, effort and paperwork as authoritie­s fly children back to Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras.

Updated figures were not made public, but new data was expected to be released at a Friday hearing in San Diego before the judge overseeing the reunificat­ion process.

“The administra­tion will continue to make every effort to reunify eligible adults with their children,” a Homeland Security statement said.

San Diego federal judge Dana Sabraw, who ordered the reunificat­ions, must decide how to address the hundreds of still-separated children whose parents have been deported, as well as how much time, if any, reunified parents should be allowed to file asylum claims.

He will also consider the American Civil Liberties Union request to give reunified parents at least a week to consider if they wish to seek asylum. The government opposes the waiting period, and Sabraw has put a hold on deporting reunified families while the issue is decided.

The federal government was supposed to reunify more than 2,500 children who were separated from their parents under the policy that criminally prosecuted anyone caught crossing illegally.

President Donald Trump ended the practice of taking children from parents and Sabraw ordered the government to reunite all the families by Thursday, but said there would be some flexibilit­y given the enormity of the effort.

In most cases, the families are released and parents typically get ankle-monitoring bracelets and court dates to appear before an immigratio­n judge. Faith-based and other groups have provided meals, clothing, legal advice, plane and bus tickets and even new shoe laces for both parents and children.

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