Los Angeles Times

BACK IN HIS ARMS

Migrant parents and their advocates face chaos and confusion.

- By Jazmine Ulloa and Kristina Davis

A migrant from Honduras and his 11-year-old son rest in an El Paso shelter after being reunited after two months apart. The government concedes it won’t reunite all families by today’s deadline.

WASHINGTON — The calls for help started coming in to immigratio­n lawyers across the country just before Memorial Day. Immigrant detainees, many fleeing gangs and violence and seeking legal asylum in the U.S., were flooding courtrooms along the Southwest border.

Dozens were parents reporting that Border Patrol agents had taken away their children, and many were under the impression they would see their sons and daughters again within hours.

“We had to break the news to them that that wasn’t true,” said Efrén C. Olivares, who was among the attorneys with the Texas Civil Rights Project to come to the aid of public defenders in McAllen. “And then the question became, ‘If not today, then when?’

“We didn’t have an answer to that.”

Nine weeks of chaos and confusion later, many still don’t.

Under an order issued by U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw in San Diego, Thursday is supposed to be the deadline for reuniting the more than 2,500 children who were taken from parents apprehende­d while crossing the border.

Government lawyers have conceded they will fail to reunite all the families by that deadline — hundreds of parents already have been deported without their children, and the government has been unable to locate many others. Officials said in court Tuesday they expected to have reunited just over 1,600 families by the deadline.

Despite the administra­tion’s professed “zero tolerance” policy, hundreds of those families have been released on immigratio­n parole, pending hearings on their asylum claims, typically with the adults wearing ankle monitors. Scores of other families, however, have been sent to immigratio­n detention centers, including two in Texas where at least 80 families are being held in custody.

Why some families have been released and others detained remains unclear, as is how long those detentions may last, according to lawyers for the families. Government officials have refused to provide answers. A federal court settlement dating to the 1990s generally limits the lockup of children in immigrant detention centers to 20 days.

As of Wednesday, the government was still working to reunite more than 1,500 parents with children. About 900 parents were fighting final deportatio­n orders. American Civil Liberties Union lawyers have asked Sabraw to delay those deportatio­ns to give the parents more time to decide whether to leave the country with their children or separate from them and have the children continue to press for asylum claims.

Government lawyers say about 130 parents voluntaril­y left their children behind. But in affidavits filed Wednesday, lawyers said some parents believed they were signing forms to release their children to relatives in the U.S. Others were coerced or frightened, and many were given documents they could not read, the lawyers have said. Some of the families primarily speak indigenous languages and are not literate in Spanish or English.

More than 450 parents already have probably been deported without their children, government lawyers told Sabraw this week. The precise number, perhaps 463, remains “under review,” they said. An additional 64 were deemed ineligible to be reunited with children because they had criminal records or other reasons that government officials said made them unfit.

At least 217 parents were released into the U.S. without their children, government lawyers said. Both the government and volunteer lawyers for the ACLU are trying to locate them in efforts to reunite the families.

The continued confusion, Sabraw said in court this week, was the “unfortunat­e” result of a policy adopted “without forethough­t to reunificat­ion or keeping track of people.”

Along the Southwest border, immigratio­n lawyers have described a reunificat­ion process as chaotic and scurried as the separation­s themselves. With family reunions often taking place in the parking lots of detention centers, activist groups have flooded the Texas border to provide help to exhausted, traumatize­d parents and children.

Annunciati­on House in El Paso has assembled hospitalit­y centers with beds, meals, showers and a change of clothing for families. So far, it has helped 250 families who were released from detention after being reunified, the group said in a statement.

In the Rio Grande Valley, to the southeast, Catholic Charities had taken in another 100 families on Wednesday, and hundreds of volunteers were cooking meals and soliciting food donations.

“We are providing them a place to be with their children … making sure they have a safe space, a tranquil space,” said Brenda Riojas, the charity’s spokeswoma­n.

Money raised from private donors and congressio­nal organizati­ons, faith groups and nonprofits under the Families Belong Together coalition has allowed advocates to purchase airline and bus tickets to help parents travel to the homes of relatives or friends across the country.

Lawyers groups, such as the American Immigratio­n Council, have been taking donations to provide counsel to parents seeking asylum or other forms of immigratio­n relief. But ensuring families have access and can connect with lawyers has been trying.

A little before noon Wednesday, Jaqueline Aranda Osorno, an attorney at Public Counsel in Los Angeles, got word that her client, a Guatemalan father, had reunited with his 13-year-old daughter. From her home, Aranda coordinate­d with volunteers in McAllen to get the pair out of town.

Buses destined for a Texas town where a sponsor family waited for them were sold out. A local church was already packed with recently reunited parents and children. Multiple families were sharing rooms.

“It’s been incredibly hard to figure out how to get this family out,” Aranda said.

Other advocates said they hadn’t been allowed on the grounds of some shelters, hurting their access to families. “Some are told to report to Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t in a week but may not understand what to do to avoid being detained again,” said Bethany Carson, an organizer with Grassroots Leadership in Austin, Texas.

Hundreds more children remain in the hands of the government — and as many as 37 have not been matched with a parent. Congressio­nal Democrats, immigrant rights advocates and lawyers continue to clamor for answers about what’s next for the separated families and other migrant children.

Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions announced the “zero tolerance” policy at the border in April. It took effect in early May. Under the policy, all adults who crossed into the country illegally were prosecuted for illegal entry. That offense is a misdemeano­r, and in nearly all cases, the immigrants were sentenced to time served, but the fact that they were taken into custody provided legal justificat­ion for the government to take children away from their parents.

With parents moved into the custody of the U.S. Marshals Service, federal officials shuffled children into tent camps or more than 100 shelters nationwide.

Through letters and private briefings, members of Congress have continued to press federal officials on how the family separation policy was crafted and rolled out, including details on the budgets and coordinati­on among agencies under the department­s of Homeland Security, Health and Human Services and Justice.

The response from agencies and Trump administra­tion officials has ranged from mixed messages to silence. In the latest briefing on Wednesday, members of the Congressio­nal Hispanic Caucus said Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen had expressed confidence the government was on pace to meet the deadline.

But members said Nielsen and other federal officials’ accounts often conflicted with what constituen­ts are seeing.

Court declaratio­ns, a scathing report from attorneys and records from at least five lawsuits against federal agencies have given glimpses into the treatment of children and families in immigratio­n custody.

Members of the American College of Physicians have called for congressio­nal oversight on the health effects of family detention on children.

“We have two main concerns,” said Matt Adams, legal director of the Northwest Immigrant Rights Project. “Will the government meet its deadline? Are families going to be locked up or treated with dignity?”

 ?? Joe Raedle Getty Images ??
Joe Raedle Getty Images
 ?? Joe Raedle Getty Images ?? IMMIGRANT FAMILIES arrive at a shelter in El Paso after being reunited. Why some families have been released and others detained remains unclear.
Joe Raedle Getty Images IMMIGRANT FAMILIES arrive at a shelter in El Paso after being reunited. Why some families have been released and others detained remains unclear.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States