Lodi News-Sentinel

Deported parents ask for children to be allowed to stay in United States

- By Kristina Davis

Deep into the extraordin­ary effort to find deported parents who remain separated from their children, attorneys are learning that about two-thirds want their children to stay in the U.S. rather than reunite as a family in their homelands.

“We’ve had some very difficult conversati­ons with parents this week, where the parent is ultimately saying, as much as they’d like to be with the child and as heartbreak­ing as it is, it’s too dangerous for the child to come back,” Lee Gelernt, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union, told a San Diego federal judge Friday.

The decisions show something government officials have long argued: that migrant families from Mexico and Central America who cross illegally into the U.S. do so largely to get their children across. Having the children flown back to their home countries — where many say they are fleeing gang violence — would seem counterpro­ductive to the parents, even if it results in long-term separation.

Gelernt said parents with older children tend to lean more toward keeping them in the U.S. because of their vulnerabil­ity to gang recruitmen­t. Parents of younger children tend to choose reunificat­ion.

Also, the presence of suitable relatives or guardians in the U.S. to care for the children is an important factor that parents consider.

U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw in June ordered all children separated from their parents at the border under the Trump administra­tion’s immigratio­n policies to be reunited, once the parents were out of criminal custody on their illegal entry prosecutio­ns.

The first phase of the effort focused on parents who were in immigratio­n custody. Within a month, about 2,000 children in government shelters were reunited. But about 400 more parents had been deported before being reunited.

Now, attorneys and other volunteers are trying to find those parents in their home countries and provide them legal counsel on their options. The legal counsel has been especially important at this stage, attorneys for the ACLU say, because many parents have reported being coerced into making decisions they don’t understand.

Of the 162 deported parents who have made decisions on reunificat­ion, 109 thus far have chosen to allow their children to stay in the U.S. Children who stay will be allowed to pursue asylum claims, during which they will live in government shelters or be placed with family members or foster families. If they lose their asylum cases, they would be sent home.

“It’s one of those decisions these parents are facing,” Gelernt said. “It is extremely difficult. They obviously are not making it lightly but they are too scared to let their children come back.”

Fifty-three parents so far have chosen to reunite, which means having their children flown home.

Lawyers are still trying to contact 47 parents.

Gelernt, who has led the litigation for the ACLU, got a look at the difficulti­es involved. He spent the past week in Guatemala, where volunteers are navigating treacherou­s roads, distrustfu­l communitie­s and remote villages to find parents.

In some areas, gangs who control the region put curfews on people going out at night, he said, presenting difficulti­es for parents who work all day, or for outsiders to come in and start asking probing questions.

During the hearing Friday, Sabraw asked if the government was leveraging all available resources to help in the search effort.

“We’re going to reach a time in the not-too-distant future where a number of parents are not located,” the judge said. “That’s not in anyone’s interest and particular­ly so for the government since this is a situation of its own making. What I would like to know is if there anything else that can be done that we’re not presently doing to locate these parents?”

 ?? GINA FERAZZI/ LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Asylumseek­ing immigrants line up at a border fence in Tijuana, Mexico on June 20. Of the 162 deported parents who have made decisions on reunificat­ion, 109 thus far have chosen to allow their children to stay in the U.S.
GINA FERAZZI/ LOS ANGELES TIMES Asylumseek­ing immigrants line up at a border fence in Tijuana, Mexico on June 20. Of the 162 deported parents who have made decisions on reunificat­ion, 109 thus far have chosen to allow their children to stay in the U.S.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States