Texarkana Gazette

Judge temporaril­y halts deportatio­n of reunited families,

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SAN DIEGO—A federal judge on Monday ordered a temporary halt to deportatio­ns of immigrant families reunited after being separated at the border, as the Trump administra­tion races to meet a July 26 deadline for putting more than 2,500 children back in their parents’ arms.

U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw imposed a delay of at least a week after a request from the American Civil Liberties Union, which cited “persistent and increasing rumors … that mass deportatio­ns may be carried out imminently and immediatel­y upon reunificat­ion.”

Justice Department attorney Scott Stewart opposed the delay but did not address the rumors in court.

The ACLU requested that parents have at least one week to decide whether to pursue asylum in the U.S. after they are reunited with their children. The judge held off on deciding that issue until the government outlines its objections in writing by next Monday.

ACLU attorney Lee Gelernt told reporters that he was “extremely pleased” by the halt and that parents need time to think over with their children and advisers whether to seek asylum.

“It’s hard to imagine a more profound or momentous decision,” he said.

The hearing in San Diego occurred as the government accelerate­d reunificat­ions at eight unidentifi­ed U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t locations. The families are scattered around the country, the adults at immigratio­n detention centers, the children at shelters overseen by the government.

Annunciati­on House, a shelter in El Paso, said the government has begun transporti­ng children in a “tremendous amount of airline flights” to El Paso and elsewhere. Director Ruben Garcia said he is preparing to take in as many as 100 reunified families a day.

Late last month, Sabraw ordered the government to reunite the thousands of children and parents who were forcibly separated at the border by the Trump administra­tion this spring. He set a deadline of July 10 for children under 5 and gave the government until July 26 to reunite 2,551 youngsters ages 5 to 17.

On Monday, the judge commended the government for a revised plan submitted over the weekend to reunify the older children. The plan calls for DNA testing and other screening measures if red flags are raised during background checks.

Jonathan White of the Office of Refugee Resettleme­nt, who is overseeing the government’s effort, assured the judge that some reunificat­ions of older children already occurred, and “it is our intent to reunify children promptly.” He went into detail on how the process was working.

The judge praised White’s testimony, saying, “What is in place is a great start to making a large number of reunificat­ions happen very, very quickly.”

“I have every confidence that you are the right person to do this,” he told White.

It was a sharp change from Friday, when the government submitted a plan for “truncated” vetting that excluded DNA testing and other procedures used for children under 5. The government official said the abbreviate­d vetting was necessary to meet the court-imposed deadline but put children at significan­t risk.

Sabraw said late Friday that he was having second thoughts about his belief that the government was acting in good faith. In a hastily arranged conference call, he told administra­tion officials that its plan misreprese­nted his instructio­ns and showed “a very grudging reluctance to do things.”

Sabraw said in court Monday that the initial plan was “exasperati­ng,” ”completely unhelpful,” and “written in a manner that seemed wholly divorced from the context of this case.”

“This is not hard stuff,” he said. “It’s laborious, but it’s not difficult to do.”

Sabraw has scheduled three more hearings over the next two weeks to ensure compliance with his order.

Also Monday, advocates said in federal court in Los Angeles that immigrant children in government custody are being given poor food, kept in unsanitary conditions and face insults and threats.

The allegation­s came amid a long-running effort by attorneys to have a court-appointed monitor oversee the U.S. government’s compliance with a decades-old settlement governing the treatment of immigrant children caught on the border.

Attorneys interviewe­d immigrant parents and children in June and July about their experience­s in Border Patrol facilities, family detention and a youth shelter. They described much of the testimony as “shocking and atrocious.”

Families described meals of frozen sandwiches and spoiled food, overflowin­g toilets and guards yelling at them and kicking them while they slept. Children said they were hungry and scared when their parents were taken away.

 ?? Associated Press ?? ■ Jelsin Aguilar Padilla shakes immigratio­n attorney Jorge L. Baron’s hand Saturday after stepping off his flight from New York into the Seattle-Tacoma Internatio­nal Airport as he is reunited with his mother, Yolany, in Seattle. A federal judge on Monday ordered a temporary halt to deportatio­ns of immigrant families reunited after being separated at the border, as the Trump administra­tion races to meet a July 26 deadline for putting more than 2,500 children back in their parents’ arms.
Associated Press ■ Jelsin Aguilar Padilla shakes immigratio­n attorney Jorge L. Baron’s hand Saturday after stepping off his flight from New York into the Seattle-Tacoma Internatio­nal Airport as he is reunited with his mother, Yolany, in Seattle. A federal judge on Monday ordered a temporary halt to deportatio­ns of immigrant families reunited after being separated at the border, as the Trump administra­tion races to meet a July 26 deadline for putting more than 2,500 children back in their parents’ arms.

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