Baltimore Sun

Dozens of immigrant children are being held in Maryland

- By Ian Duncan

Immigratio­n agents have sent dozens of children to Maryland since the Trump administra­tion announced it would separate undocument­ed families at the southwest border, service providers here say.

Some of the children, who are mostly from El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala, are being placed with foster families coordinate­d by an organizati­on based in Anne Arundel County. Others are being held in dormitorie­s in Anne Arundel and Baltimore counties, according to people involved in the process.

Many of the children have come with

“Being separated from their biological parents and not being able to reconnect with them is creating a sense of hopelessne­ss.”

little informatio­n. One is 18 months old. Several are too young to speak to their new caregivers or help social workers track down relatives who could take them in. Lawyers are trying to figure out how to put together asylum claims for 6-year-olds who don’t know why they fled their countries.

Nithya Nathan-Pineau, an attorney at the Capital Area Immigrants’ Rights Coalition, is working with children at the two dormitorie­s. Her team is trained to deal with children who have suffered trauma. But she said those who have been taken from their parents are different. “Being separated from their biological parents and not being able to reconnect with them is creating a sense of hopelessne­ss,” she said.

Maryland is one of several states to which immigratio­n agents are sending the estimated 2,300 children who have been separated from their families. The children often have no family connection to the state; service providers here say they seem to be receiving them because the system has capacity.

Maryland Attorney General Brian Frosh sent a letter to the federal agencies in charge of the children on Wednesday demanding more informatio­n about where children are being placed, specifics on their cases and plans for reuniting them with relatives. “The Trump Administra­tion’s actions endanger the safety and well-being of innocent children,” Frosh said in a statement. “Our concerns about the utter lack of accountabi­lity and failure to plan for reunificat­ion of these families must be addressed with urgency.”

Hundreds of demonstrat­ors blocked traffic at Gay and East Lombard streets during the evening rush hour Wednesday to protest the separation of children from their families. The rally outside the Baltimore office of the U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enfocement office was organized by a group of city schoolteac­hers

A spokeswoma­n for the Maryland Department of Human Services said one organizati­on it licenses has a contract to care for children who arrive in the country unaccompan­ied by adults. The spokeswoma­n said she could not identify the organizati­on.

While children are being moved away from border states, so are their parents — with at least three believed to be in Maryland. The government has started filing criminal charges against people who cross into the country illegally. Those cases are typically heard in courts in the Southwest, but as they are resolved, the adults are handed back to immigratio­n authoritie­s, who send them around the country to local jails that have agreed to hold them.

Anne Arundel, Frederick, Howard and Worcester counties have agreed to hold hundreds of immigratio­n detainees. Officials in those counties did not say whether any of their current detainees had been separated from children, but Rep. C.A. Dutch Ruppersber­ger said he met with two such men on Monday in Anne Arundel County and his office thinks a third man is also being held there. Ruppersber­ger, a Baltimore County Democrat, said the men tearfully shared stories of having their children taken away. Now they have little informatio­n about their own situations or that of their families. “These people are in limbo,” Ruppersber­ger said.

President Donald Trump signed an order on Wednesday that he said would end the separation of families. Immigrant advocates said they were still trying to determine what effect it might have. Nathan-Pineau said she hasn’t seen a plan to reunite the 2,300 children already separated, and organizati­ons working with them expect to continue their work. “They’re still going to remain apart for the foreseeabl­e future,” she said.

Tawnya Brown, the regional director for Bethany Christian Services, said her organizati­on was caring for about 15 children who had arrived in Maryland since May 7. The youngest was 18 months old.

In the past, teenagers who made the journey to the United States would arrive with scraps of paper pinned to their clothes, or relatives’ phone numbers written on their hands. The more recent arrivals sometimes don’t even have that much, she said, because their parents expected to stay with them. She said her organizati­on receives minimal informatio­n from immi- gration authoritie­s.

Brown’s organizati­on first places the children with foster parents and then begins trying to track down relatives who can look after them while their cases are processed. Workers try to keep the children in touch with their parents at least once a week, but she said it hasn’t been easy. “That has been probably the biggest challenge due to the fact that we don’t know where their parents are,” Brown said. After the calls, she said, the children are often so upset that they need counseling.

Bethany Christian Services runs a school for 16 children in Anne Arundel County and arranges for medical and mental health care while vetting relatives to take them in. Brown said the children she has seen are more traumatize­d than those she’s helped before. Their suffering emerges as they get more comfortabl­e with the staff. “The most important thing is that the child starts to feel safe,” Brown said “That’s what we have to work on a lot more now than we have in the past.”

While children don’t face criminal charges like their parents, they are still subject to deportatio­n. Nathan-Pineau’s group is working to explain their legal rights and get them lawyers. That would normally involve interviewi­ng relatives and gathering informatio­n that might form the basis of an asylum claim. But the lawyers are discoverin­g the children who have been separated from their parents don’t know why they fled their homes.

“With any child under 6 or 7, really, the amount of informatio­n we can learn from them is so limited,” Nathan-Pineau said.

Nithya Nathan-Pineau, an attorney at the Capital Area Immigrants’ Rights Coalition

 ?? ALGERINA PERNA/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Sara Lettieri, 23, with the Workers World Party leads chants during a protest at the Baltimore ICE office against Trump administra­tion border policies.
ALGERINA PERNA/BALTIMORE SUN Sara Lettieri, 23, with the Workers World Party leads chants during a protest at the Baltimore ICE office against Trump administra­tion border policies.

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