Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

1-year-old goes to court to get reunited with family

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The 1-year-old boy in a green button-up shirt drank milk from a bottle, played with a small purple ball that lit up when it hit the ground and occasional­ly asked for “agua.”

Then it was the child’s turn for his court appearance before a Phoenix immigratio­n judge, who could hardly contain his unease with the situation during the portion of the hearing where he asks immigrant defendants whether they understand the proceeding­s.

“I’m embarrasse­d to ask it, because I don’t know who you would explain it to, unless you think that a 1year-old could learn immigratio­n law,” Judge John W. Richardson told the lawyer representi­ng the 1-yearold boy.

The boy is one of hundreds of children who need to be reunited with their parents after being separated at the border, many of them split from mothers and fathers as a result of the Trump administra­tion’s “zero-tolerance policy.” The separation­s have become an embarrassm­ent to the administra­tion as stories of crying children separated from mothers and kept apart for weeks on end dominated the news in recent weeks.

Critics have also seized on the nation’s immigratio­n court system that requires children — some still in diapers — to have appearance­s before judges and go through deportatio­n proceeding­s while separated from their parents. Such children don’t have a right to a court-appointed attorney, and 90 percent of kids without a lawyer are returned to their home countries, according to Kids in Need of Defense, a group that provides legal representa­tion.

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