Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

ACLU: 911 children split at border since 2018 court order

- By Elliot Spagat

More than 900 children have been separated from their families at the border since a judge ordered that the practice be sharply curtailed, the American Civil Liberties Union said Tuesday.

One parent was separated for property damage valued at $5, the ACLU said. Six parents were separated for conviction­s of marijuana possession. Eight were split up for fraud and forgery offenses.

A 2-year-old Guatemalan girl was separated from her father after authoritie­s examined her for a fever and diaper rash and found she was malnourish­ed and underdevel­oped, the ACLU said. The father, who came from an “extraordin­arily impoverish­ed community” rife with malnutriti­on, was accused of neglect.

About 20% of the 911 children separated from June 28, 2018, to June 29 of this year were under 5 years old, including babies, the ACLU said. They include 678 whose parents faced allegation­s of criminal conduct. Other reasons include alleged gang affiliatio­n, unfitness or child safety concerns, “unverified familial relationsh­ip” or parent illness.

In June 2018, U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw ordered that the practice of splitting up families at the border be halted except in limited circumstan­ces, like child-safety concerns. He told the administra­tion to reunite the more than 2,700 children who were in government custody at the time, which has largely been accomplish­ed.

The ACLU, which based its findings on reports that the administra­tion provided, asked that the judge order the government to clarify its criteria for splitting families.

“It is shocking that the Trump administra­tion continues to take babies from their parents,” ACLU attorney Lee Gelernt said. “The administra­tion must not be allowed to circumvent the court order over infraction­s like minor traffic violations.”

The Justice Department didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

The 218-page court filing details separation­s that are sure to raise scrutiny of U.S. Customs and Border Protection. The ACLU said a 4-year-old boy was split from his family because his father’s speech impediment prevented him from answering questions, despite evidence that he was the parent.

A 2-year-old girl was split from her father after Customs and Border Protection questioned a birth certificat­e’s authentici­ty. The father, who speaks an indigenous language and didn’t have an interprete­r, was reunited after a DNA test confirmed he was a parent.

The government also took children from women whom they believed had gang ties but who in fact had been gang targets, the ACLU said.

One woman from El Salvador said a gang member forced her to be his girlfriend until he was arrested in late 2018. She came to the U.S. in February and was separated from her 3-year-old son for three months while an attorney tracked down Salvadoran documents showing she had been a victim, not a criminal.

Another Salvadoran woman was separated from her 2-year-old daughter on the toddler’s birthday because of suspected gang ties. But the woman’s attorney says her client had been raped repeatedly by a gangster who forced her to deliver marijuana inside a prison. The woman refused and turned the pot into authoritie­s, but she was arrested anyway.

In other cases, families were separated for minor crimes that, if committed by people living in the U.S., would never result in a child being taken away.

Attorneys say a 17-yearold girl spent four months in custody after being separated from her father. The father had served a six-day jail sentence for a charge of destructio­n of property valued at $5.

A 7-year-old girl has been in custody since June after being separated from her father because he had a conviction of driving without a license and had previously entered the country without authorizat­ion.

The ACLU said 14 parents were separated based on immigratio­n conviction­s combined with driving under the influence or unspecifie­d traffic offenses.

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