Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

First lady seeing lots, saying little at centers

Melania Trump visited migrant facilities in Texas and Arizona

- By Laurie Kellman

WASHINGTON » Melania Trump lit up when a 3-year-old boy darted out of “Family Unit 8” at a migrant center in Tucson, Arizona.

“Hello!” said the first lady, brightenin­g amid the semicircle of eight cells in a short-term holding center for migrants. “How are you?”

Trump, an immigrant and a mother herself, wanted to find out more about how her husband’s strict immigratio­n policy was playing out on the ground, especially among families that have been separated at the border. Two tours of migrant detention centers in a week gave her a sometimes grim view.

Now the question is what she does with that knowledge — and how she meshes it with her dislike for dividing up families and a concurrent belief in strong borders.

Spokeswoma­n Stephanie Grisham says more border visits or talks with lawmakers are possible, but it’s not clear what lessons the first lady took from her visits and what she’ll communicat­e to her husband.

“She cares about children deeply,” Grisham said. “She also believes in strong border laws and treating everybody equally.”

Before her husband reversed himself and put a halt to separation­s at the border, Trump’s office put out a statement saying the first lady “hates” to see families separated and expressing hope that “both sides of the aisle” can reform the nation’s immigratio­n laws.

The sights and sounds of Trump’s visits to border facilities in Texas and Arizona amounted to a hard-to-forget informatio­n file about the 2,000 children separated from their families nationally.

Thursday’s visits to a migrant center and a school provided Trump with indelible images and facts on the perils for families crossing the desert, the challenges for law enforcemen­t and what happens to illegal border crossers and their children when they are caught.

Despite the camera-ready nature of the events, some of the images were bleak: a cell block, doors open at the time, where minors are sorted into “Families,” “Males” and “Processed” and “Unprocesse­d.” Six expression­less teenage boys seated on a bench outside their cell. A daycare for children under 2.

At a Tucson roundtable with law enforcemen­t officials responsibl­e for hundreds of miles of border, the first lady asked how many children cross the desert alone. One official told her a 16-year-old was raped on her journey into the U.S. and gave birth in federal custody.

Another official showed Trump a picture that seemed to take her aback. It appeared to be a photo described as showing a 6-yearold boy found crossing the desert alone with a soda bottle and a note saying he was looking for his mother. Reporters later learned that the boy is alive.

The first lady at times deliberate­ly leaves her message unclear.

On her first trip to the border, her choice of clothing left everyone scratching their heads, with the inscriptio­n on the back of her jacket that read, “I really don’t care, do u?”

On her second visit, her wardrobe was understate­d. But Trump didn’t expound on her view of her husband’s immigratio­n policy.

That didn’t stop critics of President Donald Trump’s administra­tion from lumping her in with her husband.

In Phoenix, as the first lady’s motorcade approached a sprawling Southwest Key migrant facility, protesters lined the sidewalk amid a big inflatable likeness of her husband, dressed in a white robe and holding a hood reminiscen­t of the Ku Klux Klan.

“Melania Trump is guilty, guilty, guilty!” the protesters chanted of the first lady, who is from Slovenia and came to the United States on a special visa during her modeling career.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? First lady Melania Trump talks with Rodolfo Karisch, chief patrol agent, as she visits a U.S. Customs border and protection facility in Tucson, Ariz., last week. She wanted to find out more about how her husband’s strict immigratio­n policy was playing...
CAROLYN KASTER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS First lady Melania Trump talks with Rodolfo Karisch, chief patrol agent, as she visits a U.S. Customs border and protection facility in Tucson, Ariz., last week. She wanted to find out more about how her husband’s strict immigratio­n policy was playing...

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