Lodi News-Sentinel

White House ups its estimate of child separation­s to 3,000

- By Jazmine Ulloa

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion said Thursday that it had separated hundreds more children from their parents after illegal border crossings than had previously been revealed and that none of the families had yet been reunited.

About 100 of the children are younger than 5, Alex Azar, the secretary of Health and Human Services, whose agency has custody of the children, told reporters on a conference call. The total number of children taken from their parents may be as high as nearly 3,000, he said. Previously, Azar and department officials had set the number at just more than 2,000.

Azar said the new numbers reflected reports from different immigratio­n agencies and a review by hand by himself and others of case files of about 11,800 immigrant children in the agency’s care. About 80 percent of those children arrived at the border without parents; most are teenage boys.

Azar sharply objected to court orders that have directed the government to reunite families and have limited how long officials can hold children in immigrant detention. He warned that families may remain in the custody of immigratio­n authoritie­s for long periods, including those claiming asylum.

“As broken as our immigratio­n system is, we still want to treat people as well as humanly possible going through this very difficult situation,” he said.

Federal District Judge Dana M. Sabraw in San Diego has given the government until Tuesday to reunite children younger than 5 with their parents. The judge gave the administra­tion until about the end of the month to reunite all families.

“Under the present system, migrant children are not accounted for with the same efficiency and accuracy as property,” the judge wrote last month. “Certainly, that cannot satisfy the requiremen­ts of due process.”

The parents mostly have raised claims for legal asylum in the United States. President Donald Trump has ordered that they be kept locked up while their cases wend their way through immigratio­n courts, a process that often can take months or years.

Until recently, adults with credible asylum claims were typically released, often with ankle bracelets or other electronic monitoring systems, and allowed to live in the U.S. until their hearing date.

The new data are the most specific to come from Health and Human Services as the administra­tion has struggled to come up with a plan to reunite families. Azar has said the only way parents can quickly be reunited with their children is to drop their claims for asylum in the United States and agree to be deported.

The separation­s stem from the “zero-tolerance” immigratio­n policy that the administra­tion began fully implementi­ng in early May. Under the policy, officials said they would hold all adults who crossed the border illegally and charge them with misdemeano­rs. Because children can’t be placed in adult jails, the misdemeano­r charges became grounds for splitting up the families.

Amid a fierce backlash, Trump said on June 20 that the administra­tion would end the practice. Instead, the administra­tion now wants to hold families together indefinite­ly in immigratio­n detention. That could conflict with a 1997 legal case known as the Flores settlement, which has been interprete­d as limiting to 20 days the time a child can be forced to spend in immigratio­n detention.

Last week, administra­tion lawyers told federal District Judge Dolly M. Gee in Los Angeles, who has supervised the Flores settlement for years, that she should interpret the agreement to allow the indefinite detention of families while their asylum claims are processed.

On the call with reporters, Azar criticized what he called conflictin­g court rulings, including the latest ordering his agency to reunite families, saying the “extreme” deadline set by Judge Sabraw would further make it difficult for the agency to conduct its usual vetting process to confirm that adults claiming to be a child’s parents actually are.

To speed the reunificat­ion process, Azar said, officials are moving parents of children younger than 5 to facilities “extremely close” to where the children are being held.

Repeating the rhetoric of immigratio­n hard-liners, he said Congress needed to fix the immigratio­n laws and blamed parents for making dangerous journeys north and entering the country illegally.

“I wouldn’t get to stay with my children if I were in prison,” he said of the separation­s.

For now, Azar said, the department has had to narrow its review process, which includes using DNA testing to confirm parentage. More than 100 additional case managers and about 230 additional personnel have been brought on to help with the reunificat­ions, including people from emergency and disaster response teams, he said.

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