Yuma Sun

Federal judge says reuniting families is government’s sole responsibi­lity

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SAN DIEGO — A federal judge on Friday said the Trump administra­tion was solely responsibl­e for reuniting hundreds of children who remain separated from the parents after being split at the U.S.-Mexico border, puncturing a government plan that put the onus on the American Civil Liberties Union.

“The reality is that for every parent that is not located, there will be a permanentl­y orphaned child and that is 100 percent the responsibi­lity of the administra­tion,” U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw said.

His remarks in a conference call came a day after the administra­tion and the American Civil Liberties Union submitted widely divergent plans on how to reunify more than 500 stillsepar­ated children, including 410 with parents outside the United States.

The government proposed Thursday that the ACLU, which represents parents, use its “considerab­le resources” to find parents in their home countries, predominan­tly Guatemala and Honduras. The Justice Department said in a court filing that the State Department has begun talks with foreign government­s on how the administra­tion may be able to aid the effort.

Sabraw said he was disappoint­ed with the court filing “in the respect that there’s not a plan that has been proposed.” He said he would order the government to name someone to lead the effort.

“This is going to be a significan­t undertakin­g, and it’s clear that there has to be one person in charge,” he said.

Left unresolved Friday was a temporary halt on deporting reunified families that Sabraw imposed on July 16 to allow time to address another dispute. The ACLU has asked that families have at least a week to decide if they want to seek asylum after they are reunited with their children, a step that the administra­tion opposes.

Sabraw said he wanted to wait to see how a federal judge in Washington, D. C., rules on a lawsuit that also seeks a temporary halt on deportatio­ns. If that judge transfers the case to San Diego, Sabraw said he planned to convene a hearing next week for oral arguments.

 ?? RUBEN R. RAMIREZ/THE EL PASO TIMES VIA AP ?? MARIA HOLDS HER 4-YEAR-OLD SON FRANCO after he arrived at the El Paso Internatio­nal Airport on July 26 in El Paso, Texas. The two had been separated for over six weeks after being entering the country.
RUBEN R. RAMIREZ/THE EL PASO TIMES VIA AP MARIA HOLDS HER 4-YEAR-OLD SON FRANCO after he arrived at the El Paso Internatio­nal Airport on July 26 in El Paso, Texas. The two had been separated for over six weeks after being entering the country.

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