The Trump administration
Effort focuses on those who pay to smuggle children
has begun a new surge of immigration enforcement targeting parents who have paid to have their children illegally brought to the United States.
WASHINGTON — The Trump administration has begun a new surge of immigration enforcement targeting parents who have paid to have their children illegally brought to the United States.
The recent arrests, which had been largely rumored but not confirmed until now, have set off a new wave of confusion and fear through immigrant communities that have already been subject to greater enforcement.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents have begun sharing information with immigration agents about U.S.-based relatives of unaccompanied children. The information is being used to track down the parents, according to lawyers and government case workers familiar with the practice.
Parents of the children report receiving surprise knocks on their door by immigration agents — sometimes the day after their children arrive — asking about their children and demanding that they be let in, according to government case workers. Once the parents open the door or leave the house they are detained.
“The kids are basically being used as bait at this point,” said a field specialist with the Office of Refugee Resettlement, the federal agency that takes custody and shelters unaccompanied immigrant children.
The field specialist, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter, said the office began receiving calls over the weekend from scared and confused parents who had received similar visits.
The field specialist knows of at least four cases in which parents have been targeted.
Immigration lawyers report at least a dozen cases from Texas to New Jersey.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials confirmed Thursday that they have begun a new enforcement initiative to “disrupt and dismantle” human-smuggling facilitators, including arresting the sponsors who have paid criminal organizations to smuggle children into the U.S. They did not say what charges were being applied.
“ICE aims to disrupt and dismantle end-to-end the illicit pathways used by transnational criminal organizations and human smuggling facilitators,” said Jennifer Elzea, deputy press secretary for the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. “As such, we are currently conducting a surge initiative focused on the identification and arrest of individuals involved in illicit human smuggling operations, to include sponsors who have paid criminal organizations to smuggle children into the United States.”
Immigration officials cited Office of Refugee Resettlement statistics Thursday that show approximately 90 percent of all unaccompanied children encountered at the Southwest border are eventually turned over to a family member residing in the United States.
The Trump administration warned in February that the thousands of children who arrive each year as unaccompanied minors would no longer be protected against deportation, and their parents would be subject to criminal prosecution if they had paid human traffickers to bring their children across the border.
In February, Department of Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly issued new orders to agency heads that would considerably expand the number of immigrants who could be detained and deported.
One of the memos said 155,000 unaccompanied children have been detained in the past three years.
Tens of thousands of unaccompanied children and families have been apprehended since 2014, when a surge of Salvadoran, Honduran and Guatemalan mothers and children fleeing violence and poverty raced into the Rio Grande Valley in Texas.
It is common for parents who are in the U.S. illegally to pay human smugglers to arrange for their children to be brought to the United States and dropped off at the border.
Unaccompanied children are turned over to the custody of the Office of Refugee Resettlement, which will either care for them in a shelter or release them to a family member.
The Obama administration limited deportations to recent arrivals and people with criminal convictions.
But the Trump administration has cast a much wider net, expanding the definition of a criminal immigrant.
The administration says it is focusing on enforcing the law and targeting those with criminal convictions, but will also not hesitate to detain others they come in contact in the process.
Immigration lawyers called the practice of rounding up the sponsors “cruel and morally outrageous.”
The sponsors, whether parents or aunts or uncles, often care for the children while they wait for their cases to come up in court.
They also cover the costs of caring for the children, who will have to remain in government custody if the sponsors are detained or deported.