Las Vegas Review-Journal

UNLV lawyer cuts through layers of ICE

- By Jessie Bekker Las Vegas Review-journal

Representi­ng undocument­ed immigrants caught up in President Donald Trump’s “zero tolerance” policy can present many unexpected challenges, including finding your client in the sprawling U.S. Immigratio­n Customs and Enforcemen­t detention system.

Which explains why UNLV immigratio­n attorney Laura Barrera found herself bouncing down a rural Texas highway Thursday trying to find out what had become of the man who had called her about two months earlier from ICE’S Henderson Detention Center seeking help reuniting with his 5-year-old

ICE

daughter, who was being held separately by ICE.

“I was a little hesitant coming here,” Barrera told a reporter as she rolled along a rural road, warning that she might lose cell service at any moment. “At the same time, in order to be able to work on his case, I need to talk not only to him but (also to) the ICE officer in charge of his case. And they (ICE) are not really answering the phone.”

Barrera’s client is one of at least two adult immigrants confirmed to have been detained in Henderson after being separated from their children at the border as part of the Trump administra­tion’s latest border crackdown, which is aimed at deterring immigrants from entering the country illegally. In response, a federal district judge in San Diego ordered the administra­tion to abandon the family-separation policy and gave it until Thursday to reunite the more than 2,500 families that already had been divided.

Barrera said she suspects that others have been sent to Henderson’s facility, presumably because beds are available there, though she and other lawyers at UNLV’S Immigratio­n Clinic had not been able to confirm that.

A whirlwind of activity

The efforts to reunite parents and children produced a whirlwind of activity as ICE and other government department­s scrambled to meet the deadline.

Barrera was told by Las Vegas ICE agents that her client, whom she declined to name to protect his privacy and safety, had been moved to the Port Isabel detention center, at the southeaste­rn tip of Texas. She said she learned that only when she began making inquiries after the man disappeare­d without warning about a week ago.

But when she finally arrived in Port Isabel on Thursday, authoritie­s there said the man had been transferre­d again, likely to a residentia­l center for immigrant families in Karnes County, southeast of San Antonio. So Barrera climbed back in her car and set off on the 3½hour drive to get there.

As she drove, Barrera said she was having a hard time wrapping

her head around the fact that she was even there, chasing after her client. But if she didn’t go, who would represent him?

“It’s a huge access-to-justice issue when someone succeeds in finding an attorney and then they’re taken away from their attorney,” she said, referring to the limited number of qualified lawyers who provide pro bono counsel to immigrants. “There are a lot of parts of our immigratio­n system that I think are kind of inhumane … but despite doing this work, I’m still having a hard time believing this is happening.”

Another shock

Barrera got another shock when she arrived at the Karnes County facility and was told that her client was not there and never had been.

An agent at the detention center’s check-in desk told Barrera that she would have to drive back to Port Isabel.

She pushed back.

“Basically, I was like, ‘I’m not going to go back there because he’s not there,’” Barrera said.

Finally, the agent made a call and then handed her a note with an address scribbled on it.

Barrera jumped back into her rental car and hit the road again.

On Friday morning, she confirmed she had finally managed to locate her client late Thursday and determine that he had been reunited with his daughter. Both were staying at a home provided by a local charity, she said.

Michael Kagan, director of the UNLV Immigratio­n Clinic, compared the administra­tion’s immigratio­n moves to government

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