Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

O’Rourke on target about migrant children detentions

- Mica Soellner

Democratic presidenti­al candidate Beto O’Rourke has been vocal about his opposition to detaining unaccompan­ied migrant children crossing the nation’s southern border.

The El Paso, Texas, native and former congressma­n has frequently made visits to migrant detention camps and held rallies calling for them to be shut down.

“We are incarcerat­ing more children than any time in America’s history since we interned Japanese-Americans during World War II,” O’Rourke said at a Houston rally on June 29.

He repeated the claim July 11 at the League of United Latin American Citizens convention in Milwaukee. O’Rourke was among eight Democratic presidenti­al contenders, plus Jill Biden, who attended the convention. LULAC is the largest and oldest Hispanic civil rights organizati­on in the country. It was a stark claim.

Is O’Rourke right?

Digging in

We reached out to O’Rourke spokesman Chris Evans, who said the statement has been a talking point the candidate has made on the campaign trail since his June 27 visit to a detention center in Homestead, Florida.

In an email to PolitiFact Wisconsin, Evans also shared the math behind O’Rourke’s claim:

“When you add up all of those children at all of those border patrol stations, detention centers, and (Health and Human Services) shelters across the country, we are detaining more children than anytime in American history since we interned Japanese-Americans during World War II.”

Japanese internment camps

In a response to the surprise attack by Japanese forces on Pearl Harbor in 1941, President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued an executive order to relocate all people of Japanese ancestry — both citizens and noncitizen­s — inland, so they were outside of the Pacific military zone.

This was due in part to a wave of national security concerns that followed the attack. Roosevelt’s order was described as necessary to prevent potential espionage efforts and protect those with Japanese ancestry from harm amid a growing anti-Japanese sentiment among the public.

Data from the National Archives and other reported sources such as the Public Broadcasti­ng Service, show a range of 110,000 to more than 120,000 people of Japanese descent were moved to internment camps. Most were nativeborn U.S. citizens or legal permanent residents.

Evans cited the PBS documentar­y “Children of the Camps“for the number of children who were relocated to internment camps. PBS reported 120,000 Japanese people were moved and over half that figure were children, which would be a total of at least 60,000 kids.

Those impacted were forced to report to civilian assembly centers outside a massive exclusion zone designated along the West Coast. Thousands were forced to close down their businesses, abandon their farms and homes and move to the internment camps, dubbed relocation centers.

In January 1944, a Supreme Court ruling halted the detention of U.S. citizens without cause and the order was rescinded. The last internment camp closed in 1946.

In 1988, President Ronald Reagan signed the Civil Liberties Act to compensate those who were incarcerat­ed in camps. The legislatio­n offered a formal apology and paid out $20,000 in reparation­s to each surviving victim. Overall, the U.S. government paid $1.6 billion in reparation­s to detainees and their descendant­s.

That’s the historic perspectiv­e. How do the numbers compare to the situation along the border today?

Detention of migrant children hit a high

In an email, a spokespers­on for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services noted the crisis on the southern border has meant a dramatic increase in referrals of migrant children from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

As of June , DHS had referred more than 58,500 children to the department’s Office of Refugee Resettleme­nt (ORR). The number was a 57% increase from the same period in 2018. As of July 15, there are about 11,200 children actually in the office’s care, but the number changes daily.

“The number of referrals is unpredicta­ble,” the email read. “It is likely this fiscal year that ORR will care for the largest number of (unaccompan­ied alien children) in the program’s history.”

Meanwhile, U.S. Customs and Border Protection reported that 63,624 children were apprehende­d at the border from January to June. The last update was made July 10. The agency defines apprehensi­ons as physical control or temporary detainment of a person

“The number of referrals is unpredicta­ble. It is likely this fiscal year that ORR will care for the largest number of (unaccompan­ied alien children) in the program’s history.” Email from spokespers­on for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

who is not lawfully in the U.S., which may or may not result in an arrest.

So, of the nearly 64,000 apprehende­d at the border, not all of them were brought into camps.

Numerous media reports say the number of migrants crossing the border as well as arrests made at the border have reached record levels.

According to USA TODAY, DHS reported 40,891 unaccompan­ied migrant children were referred to the division for housing in 2019, a 57% increase from last year.

Evans referred to two New York Times articles and one from the Washington Post that report the number of migrant children in shelters has reached historic highs.

The New York Times reports children in shelters reached a total of 12,800 in September 2018 when the article was published, a huge increase from the 2,400 who were in custody in May 2017.

Complicate­d comparison­s

Renee Romano, a history professor at Oberlin College in Ohio, said there are parallels between the situation with migrant children today and children who were interned in camps during World War II, but the comparison isn’t exactly equal in weight.

Romano noted migrant children are arriving on a regular basis and may be detained for different periods of time while most of the Japanese American children were already living in the country and remained interned for most of the duration of the war.

“The number of kids being detained at any given time quite fluctuates,” Romano said of the migrant children detained today. “The Japanese American experience was the country rounding up an entire settled population.”

So, O’Rourke reaches a bit too far in making the comparison and uses the politicall­y loaded “incarcerat­ed” to drive home his point. The thrust of the claim, though, is a numeric one:

Not whether current detentions are higher than World War II ones, but whether there has been any other period with a higher number of detentions since then.

We could not identify any period in which the actual detention of children has been higher. Nor could the experts we talked with, even if the two have major differences in their situation.

Our ruling

O’Rourke claimed the U.S. is incarcerat­ing more children than any time since we had Japanese internment camps during World War II.

According to reports, roughly 60,000 Japanese children were interned during the World War II era. News reports and government agencies site that migrant activity in the country have hit a high, including the number of children detained.

That said, the situation with migrant children today is quite different, so O’Rourke reaches a bit too far in making his claim.

Our definition for Mostly True is “the statement is accurate but needs clarification or additional informatio­n.” That fits here.

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