The Freeman

Suit seeks payout for immigrant families separated at border

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BOSTON — President Donald Trump's administra­tion should be held accountabl­e for emotional trauma inflicted on children who were separated from their parents at the US border, lawyers say in a lawsuit that could result in compensati­on for more than 2,000 immigrant families.

The federal class-action lawsuit filed late Wednesday seeks unspecifie­d monetary damages and the creation of a fund to pay for mental health treatment for children who were taken away from their parents after the Republican administra­tion adopted a policy requiring anyone who crossed the border illegally to be prosecuted.

Now that many immigrant families have been reunited, lawyers say the focus should turn to helping children with the lingering psychologi­cal effects of their separation and detention. The attorneys say they believe this is the first case in the country to request damages for all children from central and South America who were separated.

"These children suffer from nightmares. They chew their fingernail­s until they bleed. They fall out of bed at night because they are startled awake from fear," said Susan Church, one of the lawyers who filed the lawsuit in Worcester, Massachuse­tts, against Attorney General Jeff Sessions and other administra­tion officials.

"This lawsuit is being brought so we don't have to see what happens to these children 20 years from now when they have suffered this trauma and it's never been addressed," she said.

US Department of Justice officials didn't immediatel­y respond to an email on Thursday.

The US government separated more than 2,500 children from their parents this year as the Trump administra­tion adopted a "zero-tolerance" policy on illegal immigratio­n. On June 20, Trump reversed course amid an internatio­nal outcry and said families should remain together. More than 300 parents remain separated from their children.

On Thursday, the Trump administra­tion also moved to abandon a longstandi­ng court settlement that limits how long immigrant children can be kept locked up, proposing new regulation­s that would allow the government to detain families until their immigratio­n cases are decided.

Attorneys say many families whose children are suffering the psychologi­cal consequenc­es of their separation must currently rely on lawyers to connect them with free services. Many parents can't get health insurance or drivers' licenses and don't speak English, which makes it difficult for them to find help, Church said.

The lawsuit details the stories of two families from Guatemala who are seeking asylum in the US. The parents and children are identified in the complaint only by their initials in order to protect their privacy.

One father, who was separated from his 11-year-old son for more than a month after they arrived in the US in June, told reporters Thursday that he feared he would never see his son again.

The father, identified in the lawsuit as F.C., said his son was hit in the face by another child while he was in detention. Now, his son routinely has nightmares that he's being chased by the child, he said.

Alanna Durkin Richer, Associated Press

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