Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

ACLU: 1,556 more families separated

- ELLIOT SPAGAT

SAN DIEGO — U.S. immigratio­n authoritie­s separated more than 1,500 children from their parents at the Mexico border early in the Trump administra­tion, the American Civil Liberties Union said late Thursday, bringing the total number of children separated since July 2017 to more than 5,400.

The ACLU said the administra­tion told its attorneys that 1,556 children were separated from July 1, 2017, to June 26, 2018, when a federal judge in San Diego ordered that children in government custody be reunited with their parents.

Children from that period can be difficult to find because the government had inadequate tracking systems. Volunteers working with the ACLU are searching for some of them and their parents by going door-to-door in Guatemala and Honduras.

Of those separated during the 12-month period, 207 were under 5, said attorney Lee Gelernt of the ACLU, which sued to stop family separation. Five were under a year old, 26 were a year old, 40 were 2 years old, 76 were 3, and 60 were 4.

“It is shocking that 1,556 more families, including babies and toddlers, join the thousands of others already torn apart by this inhumane and illegal policy,” said Gelernt. “Families have suffered tremendous­ly, and some may never recover.”

The Justice Department declined to comment.

The government identified 2,814 separated children who were in government custody on June 26, 2018, nearly all of whom have been reunited.

The U.S. Health and Human

Services Department’s internal watchdog said in January that potentiall­y thousands more had been separated since July 2017, prompting U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw in April to give the administra­tion six months to identify them. The ACLU said it received the last batch of 1,556 names one day ahead of Friday’s deadline.

The administra­tion has also separated 1,090 children since the judge ordered a halt to the practice in June 2018 except in limited circumstan­ces, like threats to child safety or doubts about whether the adult is really the parent.

The ACLU said the authoritie­s have abused their discretion by separating families over dubious allegation­s and minor transgress­ions including traffic offenses. It has asked Sabraw to more narrowly define circumstan­ces that would justify separation, which the administra­tion has opposed.

With Thursday’s disclosure, the number of children separated since July 2017 reached 5,460.

The government lacked tracking systems when the administra­tion formally launched a zero-tolerance policy in the spring of 2018 to criminally prosecute every adult who entered the country illegally from Mexico, sparking an internatio­nal outcry when parents couldn’t find their children.

Poor tracking before the spring of 2018 complicate­s the task of accounting for children who were separated early on. As of Oct. 16, the ACLU said, volunteers couldn’t reach 362 families by phone because numbers didn’t work or the sponsor who took custody was unable or unwilling to provide contact informatio­n for the parent, prompting the doorto-door searches in Central America.

Since retreating on family separation, the administra­tion has tried other ways to reverse a major surge in asylum seekers, many of them Central American families.

Tens of thousands of Central Americans and Cubans have been returned to Mexico this year to wait for immigratio­n court hearings, instead of being released in the United States with notices to appear in court.

Last month, the administra­tion introduced a policy to deny asylum to anyone who passes through another country on the way to the U.S. border with Mexico without seeking protection there first.

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