Imperial Valley Press

Texas investigat­ing abuse allegation­s at migrant facility

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AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Texas child welfare o cials said Wednesday they received three reports alleging abuse and neglect at a San Antonio coliseum that is holding more than 1,600 immigrant teenagers who crossed the southern border.

It is the first time state o cials announced they are investigat­ing such allegation­s at one of the emergency facilities the U.S. government has quickly set up in Texas amid a sharp increase in crossings of unaccompan­ied youths. A county o cial who also volunteers at the San Antonio site, the Freeman Coliseum, said the nature of the allegation­s do not align with what she has seen in multiple visits to the facility.

Child welfare o cials would not reveal details about who made the allegation­s, but Republican Gov. Greg Abbott said his understand­ing was that they came from someone who had been inside the facility. One of the allegation­s include sexual abuse, but no further details were provided.

Other allegation­s include insufficie­nt sta ng, children not eating and those who tested positive for COVID-19 not being separated, Abbott said at a news conference that he quickly arranged outside the facility Wednesday evening. For weeks, Abbott has joined Republican­s in criticizin­g the Biden administra­tion for the handling of the migration challenge at the U.S. southern border.

“This facility should shut down immediatel­y. The children should be moved to better sta ed and better secured locations,” Abbott said.

Bexar County Commission­er Rebeca Clay-Flores, who has been inside the facility as both an elected o cial and volunteer, said the teenagers are o ered three meals and two snacks a day and anyone who tests positive for COVID-19 is put in a separate area far from other children. She toured the facility with Abbott after his press conference and said he asked sta questions that included COVID-19 testing protocols.

“I wish the governor had done his tour before the press conference when he politicize­d children,” said Clay-Flores, an elected Democrat.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said in a statement that it could not comment on specific cases but “has a zero-tolerance policy for all forms of sexual abuse, sexual harassment, and inappropri­ate sexual behavior.”

The allegation­s were received by the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services. Spokesman Patrick Crimmins said he did not immediatel­y know if the state had received other abuse or neglect allegation­s at emergency sites for migrant youths in Texas.

HHS has rushed to open large sites to house migrant children across the Southwest amid a sharp increase in crossings of unaccompan­ied youths at the southern border. The agency’s lack of capacity as border crossings were rising at the start of the Biden administra­tion has led to children sometimes waiting for weeks in overcrowde­d and unsuitable Border Patrol facilities.

 ?? AP PHOTO/LM OTERO ?? In this March 17 file photo, Texas Gov Greg Abbott speaks during a news conference about migrant children detentions, in Dallas.
AP PHOTO/LM OTERO In this March 17 file photo, Texas Gov Greg Abbott speaks during a news conference about migrant children detentions, in Dallas.

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