The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Prosecutio­n of immigrant families ends

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The nation’s top border enforcemen­t official acknowledg­ed Monday that authoritie­s have abandoned, for now, their effort to prosecute immigrant families who cross the southern border after the president ordered an end to the separation of parents and children.

The comments by Customs and Border Protection Commission­er Kevin McAleenan came shortly after Attorney General Jeff Sessions defended the administra­tion’s tactics in a speech in Nevada and asserted that many children were brought to the border by violent gang members.

Together, their remarks added to the nationwide confusion as mothers and fathers struggled to reunite families that were split up by the government and, in many cases, sent to detention centers in different parts of the country.

McAleenan told reporters in Texas that he stopped sending prosecutor­s cases of parents charged with illegally entering the country in response to Trump’s executive order last week to cease separating families.

McAleenan and Sessions insisted that the administra­tion’s “zero-tolerance” policy remains in effect, but the cases cannot be prosecuted because parents cannot be separated from their children. The commission­er said he is working on a plan to resume prosecutio­ns.

Speaking at a school-safety conference in Reno, Sessions cast the children as victims of a broken immigratio­n system” and urged Congress to act.

While hundreds of protesters rallied outside a hotel-casino, the attorney general said more than 80 percent of children crossing the border arrive alone, without parents or guardians, and are “often sent with a paid smuggler. We can only guess how many never make it to our border during that dangerous journey.”

He claimed the MS-13 gang “is recruiting children who were sent here as unaccompan­ied minors, and some are brought to help replenish the gang. And they are terrorizin­g immigrant schools and communitie­s from Los Angeles to Louisville to Long Island to Boston. They are able to do so because we do not have a secure southwest border.”

He said five children had been found at the border carrying a combined 35 pounds of fentanyl, the powerful synthetic opioid drug blamed for an epidemic of overdose deaths nationwide.

Drug cartels, Sessions said, “take advantage of our generosity and … use children to smuggle their drugs into our country as well.”

Just outside the building where Sessions spoke, more than 200 protesters opposed to the administra­tion’s immigratio­n policies blocked a busy road. The coalition of civil rights, religious and union activists carried signs and drums and were joined by a mariachi band. Some sat in a busy roadway while police diverted traffic around them.

No arrests were immediatel­y reported.

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