Los Angeles Times

No jail for migrant children

- N yet another

Isign of how recklessly President Trump has plowed forward on immigratio­n, a federal judge ruled Monday that, no, the president cannot scrap a 20-year-old legal settlement designed to prevent children from being locked up indefinite­ly in immigratio­n jails.

The Trump administra­tion had asked U.S. District Judge Dolly Gee to change the so-called Flores settlement, which bars the government from holding undocument­ed children in detention centers for more than 20 days, with or without their parents. The Flores settlement was wisely built on the premise that innocent children should not be in custody.

In her ruling, Gee said the administra­tion’s move to change the settlement was a “cynical attempt” to shift immigratio­n policy-making to the courts after “over 20 years of Congressio­nal inaction and ill-considered executive action that have led to the current stalemate.”

Ill-considered, indeed. Fueled by an obsession with illegal immigratio­n from Mexico and Central America, the administra­tion has enacted zero-tolerance policies that are not only inhumane, but shockingly impractica­l and poorly executed.

In May the administra­tion began criminally charging all adults entering the U.S. illegally from Mexico and separating them from their children under the inane assumption that it would deter immigrants fleeing violence and corruption. When outrage erupted globally over the barbaric practice of tearing kids away from their parents, the administra­tion hastily adopted a plan to lock up the families together — hence its need to alter the Flores settlement.

But Trump ignored the lessons his predecesso­r learned the hard way. During the surge of unaccompan­ied minors and families fleeing violence in Central America in 2014, the Obama administra­tion detained families to try to deter others from making the trip and attempted to amend the Flores settlement. It ultimately abandoned the policy, however, in the face of political backlash and court orders. Instead, it released many migrant families while their immigratio­n or asylum cases were pending and worked to ensure that they would return for their court dates.

The Trump administra­tion, by contrast, has sought to turn up the pressure, taking some 3,000 children from their parents at the border before Trump relented. A judge then ordered the administra­tion to reunite the families. Amazingly — and tragically — the administra­tion seems unprepared to comply. Among other issues, some parents have already been deported while their children linger in shelters or foster care.

How many court rulings will it take? When will this administra­tion recognize that the U.S. cannot fix its broken immigratio­n system with punitive, cruel policies?

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