San Diego Union-Tribune

SETTLEMENT TALKS WITH MIGRANT FAMILIES HALTED

5,500 children separated from parents by U.S.

- BY BEN FOX Fox writes for The Associated Press.

The U.S. government withdrew Thursday from settlement negotiatio­ns to end lawsuits filed on behalf of parents and children who were forcibly separated under the Trump administra­tion’s zero-tolerance border policy.

Justice Department officials informed lawyers for the plaintiffs in a conference call that the government would not offer a global settlement in family separation cases and will defend each one in court, said Lee Gelernt, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union, which filed one of the suits.

The decision comes after eight months of negotiatio­ns and weeks after reports of a proposed settlement that would include payments of several hundred thousand dollars to each family sparked outrage among Biden administra­tion critics in Congress and elsewhere.

Gelernt said no explanatio­n was given. “It’s hard to understand DOJ’s decision other than it was inf luenced by political considerat­ions,” he said.

The Justice Department suggested in a statement that settlement­s were still possible despite its withdrawal from the talks.

“While the parties have been unable to reach a global settlement agreement at this time, we remain committed to engaging with the plaintiffs and to bringing justice to the victims of this abhorrent policy,” it said.

About 5,500 children were forcibly removed from their parents in 2018 under President Donald Trump as his administra­tion sought to stop an increase in people crossing the U.S.Mexico border with criminal prosecutio­ns, even if the migrants were presenting themselves to authoritie­s to seek asylum as permitted under the law.

The parents of hundreds of children have still not been located.

Trump halted the practice in June 2018 amid widespread outrage, including from many Republican­s, just six days before a judge ordered an end to the program in response to a lawsuit filed by the ACLU.

The settlement talks with the ACLU and attorneys for hundreds of other plaintiffs had proceeded quietly until The Wall Street Journal reported in October that the Justice Department was considerin­g paying about $450,000 to each person affected by the policy. The Associated Press later confirmed the figure had been under considerat­ion.

The suits filed under the Federal Tort Claims Act are intended in part to help compensate families for the psychologi­cal damage of the separation, but critics argue it would reward people for illegally crossing the border.

“Little children were deliberate­ly abused by our government, yet the Biden administra­tion is now going to defend the practice in court,” Gelernt said. “That is shameful.”

The American Immigratio­n Council, which filed suit on behalf of a group of mothers and children who were separated while seeking asylum, said it would continue to pursue its case. “We are committed to doing everything we can to bring these families justice,” said Kate Melloy Goettel, the organizati­on’s director of litigation.

Biden has found himself in a tough spot politicall­y on immigratio­n. His administra­tion has reversed some Trump actions aimed at stemming illegal border crossings as well as legal immigratio­n while confrontin­g a sharp rise in the number of people seeking to enter the U.S. along the southwest border.

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