Los Angeles Times

The U.S. betrays migrant kids

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KEVIN EUCEDA, a 17-year-old Honduran boy, arrived at the U.S.Mexico border three years ago and was turned over to the custody of the Department of Health and Human Services until his request for asylum could be decided by immigratio­n courts. During that period, he was required, as are all unaccompan­ied minors in custody, to meet with therapists to help him process what he had gone through.

In those sessions, Kevin was encouraged to speak freely and openly and was told that what he said would be kept confidenti­al. So he poured out his story of a brutalized childhood, of how MS-13 gang members moved into the family shack after his grandmothe­r died when he was 12, of how he was forced to run errands, sell drugs and, as he got older, take part in beating people up. When he was ordered to kill a stranger to cement his position in the gang, Kevin decided to run.

His therapists submitted pages of notes over several sessions to the file on him, as they were expected to do. But then, HHS officials — without the knowledge of the teen or the therapists — shared the notes with lawyers for Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, who used them in immigratio­n court to paint the young migrant as a dangerous gang member who should be denied asylum and sent back to Honduras. In sharing those therapy notes, the government did not break any laws. But it most assuredly broke its promise of confidenti­ality to Kevin, violated standard profession­al practices — the first therapist involved quit once she learned her notes had been shared — and offended a fundamenta­l expectatio­n that people cannot be compelled to testify against themselves in this country.

Kevin, whose story was detailed by the Washington Post, wasn’t the only unaccompan­ied minor to fall victim to such atrocious behavior, though how many have been affected is unknown. The government says it has changed that policy and no longer shares confidenti­al therapy notes, but that’s not particular­ly reassuring coming from this administra­tion. It adopted the policy once; it could easily do so again.

Last week, Rep. Grace F. Napolitano (DNorwalk) and Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) introduced the Immigrants’ Mental Health Act of 2020 to ban the practice, which is a necessary preventive measure. The bill would also create a new training regimen to help border agents address mental health issues among migrants and require at least one mental health expert at each Customs and Border Patrol facility. Both of those steps are worth considerin­g too.

That the government would so callously use statements elicited from unaccompan­ied minors in therapy sessions to undercut their asylum applicatio­ns is part of the Trump administra­tion’s broad and inhumane efforts to effectivel­y shut off the U.S. as a destinatio­n for people seeking to exercise their right to ask for sanctuary. Jeff Sessions and his successor as attorney general, William Barr, have injected themselves into cases at an unpreceden­ted rate to unilateral­ly change long-establishe­d practices and immigratio­n court precedent.

They have been able to do so because immigratio­n courts are administra­tive and part of the Justice Department, not the federal court system, and as a result they have politicize­d what should be independen­t judicial evaluation­s of asylum applicatio­ns and other immigratio­n cases. Advocates argue persuasive­ly that the efforts have undermined due process rights and made the immigratio­n courts more a tool of President Trump’s anti-immigratio­n policies than a system for measuring migrant’s claims against the standards Congress wrote into federal law.

Of course, trampling legal rights and concepts of basic human decency have been a hallmark of the administra­tion’s approach to immigratio­n enforcemen­t — witness, for example, its separation of more than 2,500 migrant children from their parents. Beyond the heartlessn­ess of the separation­s, the Health and Human Services’ inspector general last week blasted the department for botching the process. Meanwhile, the administra­tion has expanded detention — about 50,000 migrants are in federal custody on any given day, up from about 30,000 a decade ago — and forced about 60,000 asylum seekers to await processing in dangerous squalor on Mexico’s side of the border.

There are legitimate policy discussion­s to be had over how this government should handle immigratio­n, asylum requests and broad comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform. In the meantime, no government has the right to treat people with such abject inhumanity. History will remember Trump for this, but it will also remember the people who enable such atrocious acts.

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