The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Activists press for parents’ release

Immigrant supporters protest Trump

- By Michael Balsamo and Amy Taxin

Immigrant-rights advocates asked a federal judge to order the release of parents separated from their children at the border, as demonstrat­ors decrying the Trump administra­tion’s immigratio­n crackdown were arrested Tuesday at a rally ahead of a Los Angeles appearance by Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

The court action was brought by the Los Angeles-based pro bono law firm Public Counsel on behalf of three Central American mothers whose children were taken from them by U.S. authoritie­s in May.

More than 2,000 children in all have been separated from their parents and placed in government-contracted shelters in recent weeks under a now-abandoned Trump administra­tion policy

toward families caught illegally crossing the border. Public Counsel demanded that the parents be released and immediatel­y reunited with their children.

“These parents are terrified for their children and want nothing more than to ensure the scarring that this experience has already caused does not continue to inflict irreparabl­e harm,” Judy London, a Public Counsel attorney, said in a statement.

The Justice Department declined to comment.

Amid an internatio­nal outcry over the children’s treatment, President Donald Trump last week announced an end to the practice of separating immigrant families.

The Trump administra­tion has instead asked the federal court in Los Angeles to let authoritie­s detain families together for an extended period during immigratio­n proceeding­s. Under a 1997 court settlement, children must be released from detention as quickly as possible.

Health and Human Services

Secretary Alex Azar said Tuesday that his department still has custody of 2,047 immigrant children separated from their parents at the border. That is only six fewer children than the number in HHS custody as of last Wednesday.

On Tuesday, dozens of immigrant-rights activists demonstrat­ed outside the U.S. attorney’s office in downtown Los Angeles. Sessions was scheduled to address the conservati­ve Criminal Justice Legal Foundation at a hotel later in the day.

Protesters carried signs

reading, “Free the children!” and “Stop caging families.” Demonstrat­ors on sidewalks cheered as clergy members who blocked the street by forming a human chain while chanting, “Kids belong at home, not in cages” were calmly handcuffed by police and led away.

It was not immediatel­y clear how many arrests were made.

“They told us on no uncertain terms they wanted to be arrested,” said Deputy Police Chief Robert Arcos. “It was their desire to be arrested, it certainly wasn’t ours.”

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