Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Justice Dept.: 1,820 children reunited after being taken from families

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SAN DIEGO — The Trump administra­tion said Thursday that more than 1,800 children separated at the U.S.-Mexico border have been reunited with parents and sponsors, but hundreds remain apart, signaling a potentiall­y arduous task ahead as it deals with the fallout of its “zero tolerance” policy on people entering the U.S. illegally.

There have been 1,442 children age 5 and older reunified with their parents in U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t custody and 378 others who were released “in other appropriat­e circumstan­ces,” including to other sponsors, the

Justice court Still, were filing. Department more deemed than not said 700 eligible in parents a many or currently of whom not may eligible, have been deported. Of those, 431 children have parents outside the United States.

More than 2,500 children were separated from their parents at the border in the past several months amid a zero tolerance policy that criminally prosecuted any-one caught crossing illegally.

Some children who had not

seen months that was their they reunited again. seemed parents would One last slow not in father week weeks to be accept abandoned who said or his young that daughter he would did not not leave believe hera second time.

“I think that some of the children very quickly attach. Others, there’s a distance. There’s this caution, this lack of certitude, and part of it is not understand­ing what happened,” said Ruben Garcia, director of the Annunciati­on House, an immigrant-assistance center in El Paso that has received about 25 fami-lies each day this week.

Lee Gelernt, an attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union who represents the separated families, said before the latest figures were announced that the government should not be congratula­ting itself for meeting its “self-defined” deadline.

“The government shouldn’t work they’re be doing proud on reunificat­ion,” of the he said. “It should just be, ‘ We created this cruel, inhumane policy ... now we’re trying to fix it in every way we can and make these families whole.”

The Department of Homeland Security’s internal watchdog said it would review the separation of families, along with the conditions at Border Protection facilities where migrant children are held, in response to scores of congressio­nal requests quests to do so. children steadily Texas, Mexico For the to Arizona at have be ICE last reunited been locations two and arriving weeks, New with in parents. other groups Faith-based have provided and meals, clothing, legal advice, and plane and bus tickets. The families are generally released, and parents are typically given ankle-monitoring bracelets and court dates to appear before an immigratio­n judge.

But confusion and fear lingers. Jose Dolores Munoz, 36, from El Salvador, was reunited with his 7-year-old daughter last Friday, nearly two months after they were separated. His daughter cries when he leaves the house because she thinks he’s not coming back. “She is afraid,” Mr. Munoz said in Spanish. “Yesterday I left her crying, she is telling me, ‘You are not coming back. You are lying. Youare leaving me.’”

U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw in San Diego commended the government Tuesday for its recent efforts, calling it “a remarkable achievemen­t.”

“It is the reality of a policy that was in place that resulted in large numbers of families being separated without forethough­t as to reunificat­ion and keeping track of people,” said Judge Sabraw, an appointee of Republican President George W. Bush.

Immigratio­n attorneys saidthey had advocates on the ground in Central America to help parents who were deported without their children. And Mr. Gelernt said the ACLU would go looking for all of the parents to determine whether they intentiona­lly left without their children.

“I think it’s going to be really hard detective work,” he said. “And hopefully we’re going to find them.”

Both sides were due back in court Friday, when the judge was going to decide whether to ban deportatio­ns of families for seven days after they are reunified so that parents could have time to discuss their options.

Late last month, Judge Sabraw ordered a nationwide halt to family separation­s, which President Donald Trump effectivel­y did on his own June 20 following an internatio­nal outcry. Judge Sabraw issued a 14-day deadlineto reunite children under 5 with their parents and 30 daysfor children 5 and older.

On Friday, family attorneys would begin turning their attention to those who weren’t reunited — parents who had a criminal record, parentswho were no longer in the U.S. and children who were handed over to other sponsors,Mr. Gelernt said.

 ?? Joe Raedle/Getty Images ?? A woman identified only as Heydi, with her daughter, Mishel, 6, and a man identified only as Luis, with his daughter, Selena, 6, relax together after they were reunited with their children Thursday in El Paso, Texas. Heydi, originally from Guatemala, and Luis, originally from El Salvador, were reunited at an ICE processing center about two months after they were separated while trying to cross into the United States.
Joe Raedle/Getty Images A woman identified only as Heydi, with her daughter, Mishel, 6, and a man identified only as Luis, with his daughter, Selena, 6, relax together after they were reunited with their children Thursday in El Paso, Texas. Heydi, originally from Guatemala, and Luis, originally from El Salvador, were reunited at an ICE processing center about two months after they were separated while trying to cross into the United States.

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