Santa Fe New Mexican

Trump administra­tion weighs measures targeting families

- By Nick Miroff

WASHINGTON — Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen is considerin­g a series of measures to halt a new surge of Central American families and unaccompan­ied minors coming across the Mexican border, including a proposal to separate parents from their children, according to Trump administra­tion officials with knowledge of the plans.

These measures, described on condition of anonymity because they have not been publicly disclosed, would also crack down on migrants already living in the United States illegally who send for their children. That aspect of the effort would use data collected by the Department of Health and Human Services to target parents for deportatio­n after they attempt to regain custody of their kids from government shelters.

The Department of Homeland Security has previously considered some of these proposals, but there is renewed urgency within the administra­tion to address an abrupt reversal of what had been a sharp decline in illegal immigratio­n since President Donald Trump took office in January.

In November, U.S. agents took into custody 7,018 families, or “family units,” along the border with Mexico, a 45 percent increase over the previous month, the latest Homeland Security statistics show. The number of Unaccompan­ied Alien Children was up 26 percent.

Children’s shelters operated by Health and Human Services are now at maximum capacity or “dangerousl­y close to it,” an official from the agency said. Overall, the number of migrants detained last month along the Mexico border, 39,006, was the highest monthly total since Trump became president, according to Homeland Security figures.

The proposals were developed by career officials at Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t and other Homeland Security agencies, administra­tion officials said.

Tyler Houlton, a Homeland Security spokesman, confirmed the agency has “reviewed procedural, policy, regulatory and legislativ­e changes,” to deter migrants. Without giving further details, he said some of the measures “have been approved,” and Homeland Security is working with other federal agencies “to implement them in the near future.”

“The administra­tion is committed to using all legal tools at its disposal to secure our nation’s borders and as a result we are continuing to review additional policy options,” Houlton said.

The most contentiou­s proposal — to separate families in detention — would keep adults in federal custody while sending their children to Homeland Security shelters. This was floated in March by then-Secretary of Homeland Security John Kelly, now the White House chief of staff. He told CNN at the time that the children would be “well cared for as we deal with their parents.”

Kelly did not move forward with the plan, in part because of the backlash it triggered, administra­tion officials said, and also because illegal migration had plunged to historic lows.

Trump administra­tion officials described the measures as an unpalatabl­e but necessaril­y tough series of policy options to discourage Central American families from embarking on the long, dangerous journey to the border — or hiring smugglers to bring their kids north.

“People aren’t going to stop coming unless there are consequenc­es to illegal entry,” one Homeland Security official said.

Migrants from El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras represent the largest share of families and children taken into U.S. custody along the border, with many telling border agents that they fear for their lives if sent back to their home countries. The three nations, known as the “Northern Triangle” of Central America, are crippled by gang violence and homicide rates that are among the world’s highest.

Trump administra­tion officials say Central American migrants and the paid smugglers who bring them to the border shamelessl­y exploit Americans’ compassion, entering the United States illegally and gaming the asylum process.

If a migrant’s stated fear of being sent home is considered “credible,” they enter an asylum process that may take years to adjudicate, and the flood of such petitions in recent years has worsened the backlog of more than 600,000 cases pending in U.S. immigratio­n courts.

Asylum seekers are typically issued work permits while they wait for the process to play out, and when their rejected appeals are exhausted they often ignore court orders to leave the United States, choosing to remain in the country illegally.

The Trump administra­tion wants to significan­tly expand immigratio­n detention capacity, and hire more judges and expedite asylum cases to stop migrants from taking advantage of what they call “loopholes” in the asylum process.

The proposal to separate parents from their children is viewed by the agency as a more immediate tool to halt the latest border surge.

Homeland Security has three family detention centers — two in Texas, one in Pennsylvan­ia — with about 2,200 beds available. But legal restrictio­ns on its ability to detain children mean that families are typically given a court date and released from detention not long after they arrive. November saw the three detention centers reach their highest occupancy levels for the year, and they remain near maximum capacity, officials said.

 ?? U.S. IMMIGRATIO­N AND CUSTOMS ENFORCEMEN­T ?? The South Texas Family Residentia­l Center, pictured in 2015, houses Central American women and children who were fleeing poverty and gang violence in their native countries. In November, U.S. agents took into custody 7,018 families along the border...
U.S. IMMIGRATIO­N AND CUSTOMS ENFORCEMEN­T The South Texas Family Residentia­l Center, pictured in 2015, houses Central American women and children who were fleeing poverty and gang violence in their native countries. In November, U.S. agents took into custody 7,018 families along the border...

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