El Dorado News-Times

On July 4, Americans celebrate their union, rue divisions

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NEW YORK (AP) — With backyard barbecues and fireworks thundering across night skies, Americans are celebratin­g Independen­ce Day by participat­ing in time-honored traditions that express pride in their country's 242nd birthday.

But this quintessen­tial American holiday will also be marked with a sense of a United States divided for some — evidenced by competing televised events in the nation's capital.

From New York to California, July Fourth festivitie­s will be at times lively and lightheart­ed, with Macy's July Fourth fireworks and Nathan's Famous hot dog eating contest.

The day's events will also be stately and traditiona­l, with parades lining streets across the country and the world's oldest commission­ed warship firing a 21-gun salute to mark the 242 years since the signing of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce.

For some Western states, however, the holiday will be a bit more muted as high wildfire danger forces communitie­s to cancel fireworks displays.

Here are highlights of Wednesday's festivitie­s so far:

OLDEST WARSHIP

The USS Constituti­on has sailed in Boston Harbor and fired her guns again to mark Independen­ce Day.

The world's oldest commission­ed warship still afloat left its berth at the Charlestow­n Navy Yard Wednesday morning. It glided through the harbor to mark 242 years since the signing of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce.

The ship nicknamed "Old Ironsides" traveled to Fort Independen­ce on Castle Island to fire a 21-gun salute. The ship's commander saluted the crowds gathered there.

A Navy sailor on board recited the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce during the cruise.

An additional 17-gun salute was fired as the ship passed the U.S. Coast Guard Station on its way back to the Charlestow­n Navy Yard. The station is the former site of the shipyard where the vessel was built in 1797.

A HISTORIC PARADE

Crowds are lining the streets in a Rhode Island town to see what's billed as the nation's oldest continuous Fourth of July celebratio­n. Begun in 1785, the Bristol parade typically attracts about 100,000 people to the seaside town.

This year's was a scorcher:

LOS FRESNOS, Texas (AP) — Gabriel Canas, a bus driver from El Salvador who fled his homeland after members of MS-13 stormed his bus, did an initial screening interview for asylum under the worst circumstan­ces.

He hadn't spoken to his 9-year-old daughter since the Border Patrol separated them two weeks earlier. And in that time, he had been moved repeatedly from one detention facility to another.

"The day I had my interview, I wasn't well because they'd taken my daughter away. I was worried sick. I didn't know where she was. I hadn't spoken to her," Canas told a judge at the Port Isabel Detention Center in Texas, where parents of many of the more than 2,000 children who were separated under the Trump administra­tion's "zero tolerance" policy await their fate.

His case illustrate­s an overlooked effect of the separation­s: Some immigrants complain that they stumbled through their first asylum interviews when they were deeply distraught over losing their children. The interviews can have life-changing consequenc­es because they are critical to establishi­ng why families cannot return home safely.

Not until a day after the interview did Canas learn through a lawyer what happened to his child. The asylum officer who conducted the interview issued a deportatio­n order. On Monday, an immigratio­n judge upheld it.

The judge cited new Justice Department guidelines that gang violence is not sufficient grounds for asylum. But Canas blames his poor interview and plans to seek another one.

Volunteer lawyers say parents are distressed about losing their children and having no firm date for when they will reunite, putting them at a big disadvanta­ge when they meet with asylum officers from the Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Service.

The so-called credible-fear interviews at Port Isabel take place by phone within two to four weeks of a parent's arrest and last 45 to 90 minutes each, according to immigratio­n attorney Jodi Goodwin. Getting an answer can take a week.

To clear the initial hurdle, asylum seekers must demonstrat­e a "significan­t possibilit­y" that they can prove that they have been persecuted or have a well-founded fear of persecutio­n on grounds of race, religion, nationalit­y, membership in a social group or political opinion if they are returned home.

They are judged partially on the consistenc­y of their statements to border inspectors at the time of arrest. Attorneys say many asylum seekers, usually speaking through translator­s, fumble their interviews by holding back on details that may help their cases.

The risks of the interviews don't trouble immigratio­n hard-liners. Many of them see the asylum process as a joke, saying it invites fraud by migrants who exaggerate claims and exploit loopholes to get into the U.S. When legal groups talk about flubbed interviews or asylum seekers who need to be coached through the process, hard-liners see evidence that migrants are rehearsing from a script.

Harlingen immigratio­n attorney Norma Sepulveda is representi­ng a dozen parents detained at Port Isabel, including Canas.

"The first thing he said to the asylum officer was: Do you know where my daughter is?" said Sepulveda, who found the girl in Arizona after she was transferre­d there from Chicago.

After President Donald Trump ordered an end to the separation­s on June 20, border authoritie­s generally stopped splitting up families for prosecutio­n. But many at Port Isabel were arrested before Trump reversed course and are still separated. A federal judge in San Diego ruled last week that families must be reunited in 30 days, or 14 days if the children are younger than 5 years old.

Many of the parents have already been interviewe­d. Goodwin, who spearheads a network of volunteer lawyers, estimates that her attorneys

had counseled about 210 separated parents at Port Isabel by the end of June. Most of them — about 150 — had already been through initial interviews.

Among those parents, more than half had talked to their children by phone. But they typically knew only that the children were in a government shelter and maybe the state or city where it was.

More than 3 out of 4 asylum seekers passed the screening from October to January, according to the latest published statistics. That approval rate may fall after Attorney General Jeff Sessions' decision to declare that domestic and gang violence are generally not sufficient grounds for asylum.

In Canas' case, the immigratio­n judge cited the June 11 order from Sessions.

"It's not that I think that your fear is illegitima­te," Judge Morris Onyewuchi said. "But the cops I must follow have

ruled that gang extortion, gang recruitmen­t are not grounds for asylum."

Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services said it asks every asylum seeker if they feel comfortabl­e proceeding and, if not, the interview is reschedule­d.

"All applicants are asked about their health, to include their mental health and have the opportunit­y to discuss that issue as well as any issue that might impact their case with the interviewi­ng officer. Our supervisor­s are directed to reschedule cases pending concerns

that the applicant might have," the agency said in a statement.

The advocacy group Kids in Need of Defense sent volunteer attorneys to Port Isabel this week with the goal of counseling parents before their initial screening.

"We are talking to people who are distraught because they don't know where their children are and they're facing a complex, potentiall­y life-ordeath interview," said Wendy Young, president of the group. "To have to face a complicate­d

legal proceeding when you're so focused on the safety of your child, I can't imagine what that feels like."

Canas, who was separated from his daughter at the Texas border, hopes to be reunited with her and to join his legal-resident parents and U.S. citizen sister in the U.S. His chances are poor, Sepulveda said, but he will seek a fresh asylum review.

"The purpose of coming here was to save my life and my daughter's life," he said. "That's all."

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