Los Angeles Times

Deadline to reunite families nears

Federal judge declines to ease order, despite difficulti­es locating deported parents.

- By Kristina Davis Davis writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — The court-imposed deadlines for the government to reunite families separated at the border will remain intact, although a federal judge acknowledg­ed that they may need to be relaxed in some cases, including for the 19 parents who were deported without their toddler children.

More than a week into the massive effort to try to reconnect some 3,000 children with their parents, lawyers for the Department of Justice said Friday that it has dedicated “immense” resources to try to comply with the court’s June 26 order.

But the process that the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has put into place to match up family members will take some time — perhaps longer than the deadline permits — if it is to comply with existing policies and procedures designed to protect children from human traffickin­g, the Justice Department argued.

The order gives the government until Tuesday to reunify children younger than 5 with their parents, and until July 26 for older children.

As many as 3,000 children remain separated from their parents, according to new estimates by HHS.

In a status conference Friday in San Diego, the Justice Department asked for clarificat­ion on how to proceed so it can either meet the deadlines or be excused from them.

U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw was reluctant to extend the deadlines, instead urging the government to streamline processes where appropriat­e, “but of course never losing sight of the safety of the children,” he said.

The government also asked the judge to clarify whether the order applied to parents who have already been deported; the judge confirmed it did.

The most pressing work involves reunifying the youngest children with their parents, and Sabraw encouraged the government to make every effort possible to meet the Tuesday deadline while acknowledg­ing that 100% compliance may be difficult, if not impossible, in some circumstan­ces.

Justice Department attorney Sarah Fabian said so far, 86 parents have been matched to 83 children younger than 5. Of those parents, 46 are in immigratio­n custody, 19 were released from immigratio­n custody and 19 were removed from the U.S. without their children. Nine are believed to be in the custody of the U.S. Marshals Service.

Sixteen children believed to have been separated at the border have not yet been matched to parents.

Additional­ly, a background check on the 86 parents revealed criminal histories of kidnapping/rape or child cruelty against two that make them unfit for reunificat­ion, Fabian said.

Lee Gelernt, an attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union, said advocacy groups are standing by to help locate parents to meet the deadline, even those who were removed and are now in other countries.

“We will get as many lawyers as necessary to track those families down,” he promised.

The judge ordered the government to provide the ACLU with a list of names of parents of the youngest children by 5 p.m. Saturday so the renewed search effort can begin.

A declaratio­n by an Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t official filed Friday said the young children who have been identified for reunificat­ion are detained in 23 facilities across 13 states. ICE has so far flown 23 parents on commercial airlines to detention facilities closer to where their children are being housed to facilitate reunions.

Going forward, the Justice Department said that it intends to detain families together — a solution it argued complies with both Sabraw’s order as well as the Flores agreement, a court settlement that limits the amount of time children can be held in immigratio­n detention.

When asked for clarificat­ion on this point, Sabraw agreed that nothing in his order takes away the government’s discretion to either detain or release parents in custody; keeping families together is the key.

As to the first deadline under the court order — that all detained parents should be in communicat­ion with their separated children by Friday — the government said it has complied. To aid in the communicat­ions, the Justice Department said tablets have been distribute­d to detention centers for video chats.

 ?? David Maung EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? PROTESTERS rally Monday in San Diego against President Trump’s “zero tolerance” immigratio­n policy. As many as 3,000 children remain separated from their parents, according to new government estimates.
David Maung EPA/Shuttersto­ck PROTESTERS rally Monday in San Diego against President Trump’s “zero tolerance” immigratio­n policy. As many as 3,000 children remain separated from their parents, according to new government estimates.

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