Porterville Recorder

ACLU: 911 children split at border since 2018 court order

- By ELLIOT SPAGAT and ASTRID GALVAN

SAN DIEGO (AP) — More than 900 children, including babies and toddlers, were separated from their parents at the border in the year after a judge ordered the practice be sharply curtailed, the American Civil Liberties Union said Tuesday in a legal attack that will invite more scrutiny of the Trump administra­tion’s widely criticized tactics.

The ACLU said the administra­tion is separating families over dubious allegation­s and minor transgress­ions including traffic offenses. It asked a judge to rule on whether the 911 separation­s from June 28, 2018, to June 29 of this year were justified.

In June 2018 — days after President Donald Trump retreated amid an internatio­nal uproar — U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw ordered that the practice of splitting up families at the border be halted except in limited circumstan­ces, like threats to child safety. The judge left individual decisions to the administra­tion’s discretion.

Since then, a parent was separated for having damaged property valued at $5, the ACLU said. A 1-year-old was separated after an official criticized her father for letting her sleep with a wet diaper.

In another case, a 2-year-old Guatemalan girl was separated from her father after authoritie­s examined her for a fever and diaper rash and found she was malnourish­ed and underdevel­oped, the ACLU said. The father, who came from an “extraordin­arily impoverish­ed community” rife with malnutriti­on, was accused of neglect.

About 20 percent of the 911 children separated from in the year after the judge’s order were under 5 years old, the ACLU said.

Most parents went weeks without knowing where their children were, and some weren’t even clear on why they had been separated. Roughly a third of the 900 children who have been separated from their families since the judge’s order have been in the care of Catholic Charities Community Services, which says only three children have been reunited with the parent with whom they traveled.

The organizati­on says 185 children were released to sponsors after weeks or months in government shelters and 33 were returned to their home countries.

The separation­s occurred during an unpreceden­ted surge of children from Central America that has overwhelme­d U.S. authoritie­s, most coming in families but many unaccompan­ied. Acting Customs and Border Protection Commission­er Mark Morgan told a Senate committee Tuesday that the agency encountere­d more than 300,000 children since Oct. 1.

More than 2,700 children were separated at the time of Sabraw’s 2018 ruling, which forced the government to reunify them with their parents.

The judge later ordered the government to find children who were separated since July 1, 2017, a group that an internal watchdog report estimated numbered in the thousands but has not yet been determined. The administra­tion didn’t have adequate tracking systems at the time.

The ACLU, which based its findings on reports that the administra­tion provided, asked Sabraw to order the government to justify separation­s over the last year and to clarify its criteria for doing so.

“It is shocking that the Trump administra­tion continues to take babies from their parents,” ACLU attorney Lee Gelernt said. “The administra­tion must not be allowed to circumvent the court order over infraction­s like minor traffic violations.”

The Justice Department didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

The 218-page court filing details separation­s that are sure to raise scrutiny of Customs and Border Protection. They include 678 separation­s of children whose parents faced allegation­s of criminal conduct. Others faced allegation­s of gang affiliatio­n, child safety concerns, unverified familial relationsh­ips or parent illness.

Six parents were separated for conviction­s of marijuana possession. Eight were split up for fraud and forgery offenses.

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