The Mercury News

Judge: Government must reunite families faster

- By Maria Sacchetti, Arelis R. Hernandez and Marissa J. Lang

WASHINGTON >> A federal judge told the government Tuesday that it must move faster to reunite children taken from their parents at the southwest border, even as the Trump administra­tion said many separated families aren’t eligible for reunificat­ion.

From Michigan to Arizona, some of the youngest children placed in government custody as part of President Donald Trump’s border crackdown were handed over to parents who had been released from detention, given ankle monitors and told to await future deportatio­n proceeding­s.

A 27-year-old Honduran man who asked to be identified by only his first name, José, said his 3-yearold son didn’t recognize him at first when they were united in Phoenix on Tuesday. José said he tried to kiss and hug the boy, but he was stiff and cried inconsolab­ly.

“I asked him if he was upset with me,” José said. “And he just looked at me. He didn’t say anything and then I prodded him and he said, ‘yes.’ It broke my heart.”

Photos and videos posted to Twitter by a reporter for the local ABC affiliate in Grand Rapids, Michigan, showed Ever Reyes Mejia, 30, tightly clutching his curly-haired 3-year-old after they were reunited at a U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t office.

“Here, look, we’re going to go in this convertibl­e,” a woman leading them down the sidewalk said in Spanish, according to the videos, as Mejia nuzzled the smiling boy’s cheek. “Look at this car, buddy,” the woman said to the child. “Do you see? OK? You need to sit in this little seat.”

The families were immediatel­y showered with offers of food, shelter, clothing and toys from a legion of volunteers.

But many other parents and children were still awaiting informatio­n about when they would be reunited, despite a court order from U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw to return all 102 children ages 4 and younger by Tuesday. Sabraw has said all separated children — a group the government says numbers “under 3,000” — must be reunited with their parents by July 26.

Ricardo de Anda, an immigratio­n lawyer who represents four children under the age of 5 who were being held in Phoenix and New York City, said he had not heard anything from federal officials about reunificat­ion plans.

“I’m in touch with all their mothers and nothing has happened,” de Anda said from Laredo, Texas. “There’s a tight group of asylum lawyers down here and no one jumped out to say their client was reunited. We are all sort of scratching our heads.”

The government told Sabraw it would return 38 of the youngest separated children to their parents by Tuesday night, and would reunite more once DNA testing and other checks were complete.

But Sabraw said he believed as many as 63 children could be released Tuesday, or soon afterward, if the government streamline­d the process and worked harder to locate parents who were no longer detained.

“There’s still much time left today,” he said from the bench during a late-morning hearing in San Diego. “These are firm deadlines. They’re not aspiration­al goals.”

Justice Department lawyer Sarah Fabian said 75 of the children are eligible for release.

Another 27 cannot be immediatel­y be reunited for various reasons, she said. Some did not cross the border with their parents. Others have parents who are serving criminal sentences. Some parents have serious criminal histories, including for child abuse, and may be deemed unfit.

The American Civil Liberties Union, which is representi­ng the parents in the class-action lawsuit, said U.S. officials “have not even tried” to return 12 children to parents who were deported, and should have more quickly found and vetted eight parents who were released in the United States.

Most of the parents of the youngest children were being released from custody to await immigratio­n hearings or deportatio­n proceeding­s, the government said. But lawyers signaled in court that the government could seek to detain parents and older children after they are reunited. Officials have considered using military installati­ons for that purpose.

Army Lt. Col. Jamie Davis, a Pentagon spokesman, said no migrants are being held now on U.S. military bases, but federal officials have asked the Pentagon to make room for up to 20,000 unaccompan­ied minors and as many as 12,000 family members.

The process could take weeks.

 ?? PAUL SANCYA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ever Reyes Mejia of Honduras carries his son after being reunited and released by U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t in Grand Rapids, Mich.
PAUL SANCYA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ever Reyes Mejia of Honduras carries his son after being reunited and released by U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t in Grand Rapids, Mich.

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