Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

2,000 children remain in limbo

After court order, no plan for unificatio­n at border emerges

- By Jazmine Ulloa, Sarah D. Wire and Eliza Fawcett Molly Hennessy-Fiske in Port Isabel, Texas, and Ruben Vives in McAllen, Texas, contribute­d. jazmine.ulloa@latimes.com

Trump administra­tion faces court ruling that orders federal agencies to reunite families over the next month.

WASHINGTON — Activists went without food near the border in Texas, protesters banged pots outside an immigratio­n agency office in Washington and Congress prepared to go on break after rejecting a potential fix as the saga of migrant children in federal custody dragged on Wednesday for another day without resolution.

A day after a federal judge in San Diego ordered the Trump administra­tion to reunite 2,042 migrant children taken from their parents and put into detention facilities at the border, no plan for bringing the families back together had emerged and the administra­tion still has a chance to appeal the ruling.

U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw’s preliminar­y injunction requires children younger than 5 to be reunited with their parents within 14 days and older children within 30 days. But along the border, civil rights and immigratio­n lawyers struggled to understand whether that would mean the release of children and parents from custody, or the expansion of family detentions.

In court, a government lawyer said Health and Human Services officials, who are tasked with placing the children in shelters across the country, were working to comply with the judge’s order. But the department did not issue an official statement, while its inspector general’s office announced it would launch a broad review of conditions at shelters to ensure the children are not mistreated or abused.

Devin O’Malley, a Justice Department spokesman, urged Congress to pass a law so the government could indefinite­ly detain immigrant parents and children together, rather than in separate facilities, under the Trump’s administra­tion’s “zero tolerance” policy for illegal border crossers. He couched the problem as one of crime, not distraught families.

“Without this action by Congress, lawlessnes­s at the border will continue, which will only lead to predictabl­e results — more heroin and fentanyl pushed by Mexican cartels plaguing our communitie­s, a surge in MS-13 gang members, and an increase in the number of human traffickin­g prosecutio­ns,” O’Malley said.

But that plea fell flat when the House overwhelmi­ngly defeated, by a vote of 301-121, an ambitious immigratio­n bill that would have allowed migrant families to be kept together in detention, effectivel­y killing chances for significan­t immigratio­n legislatio­n this year.

Congress is scheduled to recess after Thursday for a July 4 holiday that will extend through next week. With the furor over child separation­s still roiling, many members are expecting angry constituen­ts as they return to their districts to campaign for the November midterm elections.

At a park in McAllen, Texas, near the border with Mexico, immigrant advocates celebrated a community fast, where one person goes without food for 24 hours and passes it on to another protester.

Nearly 2,000 miles away, under a downpour in Washington, D.C., about 60 protesters chanted and banged on pots and bowls with metal spoons outside the U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t headquarte­rs. “Have you heard the recording of the kids crying in detention centers?” yelled Haydi Torres, an organizer with Movimiento Cosecha, an immigrant rights group. “Doesn’t that break your heart?”

Republican leaders weren’t aiming for an immigratio­n fight in an election year, but the emotion-packed issue was thrust upon them when President Donald Trump ordered the end of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program last September.

Congress failed to reach a solution by his March deadline, leaving about 800,000 so-called Dreamers — people brought to the country illegally as children — in limbo as the issue makes its way through the courts.

Lawyers and immigrant rights groups say they now see the same strategy play out regarding family separation­s — a self-inflicted crisis by the White House has become a drawn-out political and legal drama in Washington and a heartache for the families involved. Trump last week caved to public pressure and signed an executive order that suspended the practice of separating children from parents facing prosecutio­n.

But his directive did so by requiring families be detained together — a move that faces multiple legal challenges in connection with the so-called Flores agreement, a landmark 21year-old court settlement under which immigrant minors can be detained no longer than 20 days.

At least five lawsuits have been filed against federal immigratio­n agencies since the Trump administra­tion began enforcing its “zero tolerance” policy along the southwest border, requiring prosecutio­n of all adults who enter the country illegally for misdemeano­r crimes, or a felony in the case of multiple offenses.

In a federal court in Washington on Wednesday, lawyers for three Central American asylum seekers detained in Texas this month said their clients had struggled to obtain basic informatio­n about their children from caseworker­s, including their location and whether they were sick or had been injured.

A father, who was shot in the shoulder in Honduras, said he and his 12-year-old daughter fled when he and his family received death threats. He said he has not been able to reach her since they were separated at the border.

 ?? ERIC GAY/AP ?? Immigrant families walk to a Texas respite center Wednesday after they were processed and released by border officials.
ERIC GAY/AP Immigrant families walk to a Texas respite center Wednesday after they were processed and released by border officials.

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