The Guardian (USA)

Calls to block DoJ official from court seat over role in Trump’s family separation­s

- Stephanie Kirchgaess­ner in Washington

Immigrant rights groups are calling on New York senators to oppose the judicial nomination of a top Department of Justice official because of her role in the Trump administra­tion’s child separation policy.

A letter to the senators signed by Families Belong Together (FBT), a campaignin­g group that opposes the Trump administra­tion’s separation policies, said Iris Lan’s “involvemen­t in and facilitati­on of” the administra­tion’s policy made her unfit to serve on a lifetime seat as a federal judge in the southern district of New York.

Senate rules require district court judges to be informally approved by the state’s two home senators in order to proceed with their confirmati­on, in a secretive process that is known as giving judicial nominees a “blue slip”.

If Lan’s nomination were to be blocked by the two senators – Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand – it would mark the first time that a longtime career official who had knowledge of and involvemen­t in the Trump administra­tion’s separation policy would be blocked from career advancemen­t.

The letter from Families Belong Together follows a report in the Guardian that described how Lan, who serves as an associate deputy attorney general, had played a role in the 2017 removal of a junior prosecutor in Texas after he had raised concerns with his superiors about migrant children who were going missing after their parents had been arrested for allegedly entering the US illegally.

The Guardian also reported that Lan was present on a 2018 conference call in which her then boss, the now former deputy attorney general Rod Rosenstein, instructed US attorneys in border states that there would be no exception to a “zero tolerance” policy to arrest all migrants who entered the US illegally, including families with children under the age of five.

In effect, the instructio­n meant that no child was too young to be separated from their parents.

“The family separation policy has led to profound emotional and psychologi­cal harm to these children, as well as lasting damage to the human rights leadership of the United States on the global stage,” the letter said. “Ms Lan’s involvemen­t in and facilitati­on of the policy demonstrat­es her lack of fitness for the bench, and we urge you to oppose her confirmati­on.”

The letter was also signed by Demand Justice, a progressiv­e advocacy group that campaigns against “extreme” judicial nominees.

Neither Schumer nor Gillibrand’s office responded to a request for comment.

The activist opposition Lan is facing raises questions about hurdles other longtime career officials may face when they are asked about the role they played in implementi­ng the Trump administra­tion’s most controvers­ial – and sometimes illegal – public policies.

The Department of Justice has said it never espoused a “child separation policy”. It has also said that Lan did not have a role in making policy in her role as a career official.

But the department’s 2018 decision to implement a “zero tolerance” policy did, according to other former senior Trump administra­tion officials, force the Department of Homeland Security and other agencies to execute mass arrests of migrants who were then criminally prosecuted by US attorneys in border states for committing misdemeano­r border crossing violations.

In previous administra­tions, families were either allowed to await their immigratio­n trials on bail or were held together, except in circumstan­ces when migrant children were seen as being in danger. But under the Trump administra­tion, thousands of minors were separated from their parents under the new policy, including at least 105 children who were under the age of five, and 1,033 who were under the age of 10.

Asked about whether it was fair to target a career official who was not personally responsibl­e for the administra­tion’s policy, FBT director Paola Luisi, said she believed that focusing on Lan’s reputation for being “apolitical” was a “cop-out”.

“I don’t need to go to Harvard Law to understand that you shouldn’t rip a child out of a parents arms, and I don’t need to say that I’m ‘apolitical’ to take a stand. Across the board we’re seeing heroes standing up, who have the backbone to stand up to this sort of thing,” Luisi said.

“It is frankly pathetic to hide behind words like ‘I was just doing my job’. This goes beyond that. It is basic human dignity and compassion,” she added.

It took, she said “a whole bureaucrac­y” to enact the Trump administra­tion policies that have come under fire.

Lan was nominated to serve on the court, one of the most prestigiou­s judicial postings in the US, in December 2019 and was then renominate­d in May 2020.

The DoJ did not respond to a request for comment.

 ?? Photograph: Eugene García/EPA ?? Protest against immigrant family separation­s in Los Angeles in June 2018.
Photograph: Eugene García/EPA Protest against immigrant family separation­s in Los Angeles in June 2018.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States