Marysville Appeal-Democrat

463 parents separated from children may have been deported without them

- The San Diego Union-tribune (TNS)

SAN DIEGO – With two days to go before a court-imposed deadline, the federal government has reunited or otherwise resolved cases for fewer than half of the 2,551 children 5 and older separated from their parents at the border, according to a Monday court filing.

The Trump administra­tion also said it believes 463 parents were deported while their children remained in the U.S., but that it is reviewing those cases.

The filing is the latest in a class-action lawsuit brought by the American Civil Liberties Union in February on behalf of families separated at the U.s.-mexico border under the administra­tion’s “zero tolerance” immigratio­n policy.

Last month, U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw ordered the Trump administra­tion to reunify families, starting with children younger than 5. Now the administra­tion is trying to meet a Thursday deadline for older children.

The government reported 1,187 reunificat­ions “or other appropriat­e discharges.” Those children were reunited with 879 parents who were still in immigratio­n detention when the government was ordered to put the families back together, the filing said.

More than 500 parents have been “green-lighted,” the government said, and are waiting on transporta­tion to be reunited with their children, many of whom were sent to facilities across the U.S.

The government reported that about 130 parents told immigratio­n officials during interviews that they preferred their children stay in the U.S., often with other relatives.

The ACLU’S attorneys have been pushing the government for the names of those parents, and in Monday’s court filing called for the administra­tion to give them an updated list.

“These parents urgently need consultati­ons with lawyers, so that they do not mistakenly strand their children in the United States,” ACLU attorneys wrote in the court filing.

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