The Columbus Dispatch

After reuniting, families spread throughout country

- By Will Weissert and Elliot Spagat

McALLEN, Texas — Manuel Martinez, who fled Honduras because gangs were trying to recruit his 12-yearold son, was prepared to be separated from his child after paying a smuggler to cross the Rio Grande by boat and getting arrested by the U.S. Border Patrol.

His worst fears never came true.

Martinez pleaded guilty to illegal entry on Wednesday — the day President Donald Trump ordered an end to the separating of families — and, while he wasn’t kept under the same roof as his son, they were held in the same compound. They were reunited on Saturday, after five days apart, and were released into the U.S., a tracking device on Martinez’s ankle, while he pursues asylum.

“I was very worried even though we were never really separated,” he said in McAllen’s Greyhound station as he and his son were about to board a bus to Atlanta to join a friend.

The McAllen station, a hub in the busiest U.S. corridor for illegal crossings, looks much as it did before the Immigrant Patricia Lozano, of Honduras, waits with her son Diego inside the bus station in McAllen, Texas. The family was processed and released on Saturday by U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

administra­tion began enforcing a “zero tolerance” policy in early May of prosecutin­g every illegal entry. The policy resulted in the separation of more than 2,300 children before Trump reversed course in the face of an internatio­nal outcry and said families will remain together.

On a typical day, more than 100 asylum-seekers are released from McAllen-area holding facilities, clutching their belongings in clear plastic bags stamped with Department of Homeland Security logos, said Norma Pimentel, executive director of Catholic Charities of the Rio Grande Valley.

They are led by volunteers

to the charity’s headquarte­rs a few blocks away to shower, eat and rest — though volunteers’ first order of business is to distribute shoelaces because they are confiscate­d from immigrants in custody to prevent suicides.

“Every day is like this. It never ends,” Pimentel said as children played with toys on the floor while adults in ankle monitors sat in rows of plastic chairs. Federal authoritie­s have for years used electronic monitoring devices to keep track of immigrants released while they await further court proceeding­s.

Still, McAllen is just a snapshot of the situation along the border, where Trump’s reversal on family separation has sown chaos and uncertaint­y and there has been little guidance from the administra­tion.

It is not clear how many asylum-seekers are still entering the country, how many are being detained as families, and how many are being released. Nor is it known how long it will take for all parents and guardians to be reunited with their children.

Homeland Security said late Saturday that 522 youngsters have been reunited since they were separated under the zero tolerance policy and that it has establishe­d a process to ensure that family members know where their children are and can communicat­e with them.

It said that 2,000-plus children remain separated, but that the government knows where all them are and is working to reunite them with their families.

Federal authoritie­s are readying a special reunificat­ion center at a remote detention center in Port Isabel, about 55 miles east of McAllen.

About 70 families arrived at the Catholic Charities’

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