Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Parents of 545 kids separated at the border can’t be found

- By Caitlin Dickerson

Radio spots are airing throughout Mexico and Central America. Court-appointed researcher­s are motorbikin­g through rural hillside communitie­s in Guatemala and showing up at courthouse­s in Honduras to conduct public record searches.

Their efforts are part of a wide-ranging campaign to track down parents separated from their children at the U.S. border beginning in 2017 under the Trump administra­tion’s most controvers­ial immigratio­n policy. It is now clear that the parents of 545 of the migrant children still have not been found, according to court documents filed this week in a case challengin­g the practice.

About 60 of the children were under the age of 5 when they were separated, the documents show.

Though attempts to find the separated parents have been going on for years, the number of parents who have been deemed “unreachabl­e” is much larger than was previously known.

Under court order, the government first provided an accounting of separated families in June 2018, reporting that about 2,700 children had been taken from their parents after crossing into the United States. After months of searching by a court-appointed steering committee, which includes a private law firm and several immigrant advocacy organizati­ons, all of those families were eventually tracked down and offered the opportunit­y to be reunited.

But in January 2019, a report by the Health and Human Services Department’s Office of the Inspector General confirmed that many more children had been separated, including under a previously undisclose­d pilot program conducted in El Paso, Texas, between June and November 2017, before the administra­tion’s widely publicized “zero tolerance” policy officially went into effect.

Under that policy, the Trump administra­tion directed prosecutor­s to file criminal charges against those who crossed the border without authorizat­ion, including parents, who were then separated from their children when they were taken into custody. Some parents who crossed the border at legal ports of entry were also among those separated from their children.

The Trump administra­tion fought for months against providing documentat­ion on the additional families, arguing that it was not necessary because the children had already been released from federal custody into the care of sponsors, who are typically relatives or family friends. The parents of the children had already been deported without them.

But in June 2019, under court order, the government eventually acknowledg­ed that an additional 1,556 children had been separated from their families; 200 of them were under 5 years of age at the time they were taken into custody.

When that informatio­n came out, the search efforts started again but were made significan­tly more difficult by the amount of time that had passed between when the children were released from federal custody and when volunteer researcher­s began trying to find them.

The effort hit another roadblock with the outbreak of the coronaviru­s pandemic, during which travel through the Central American countries where most of the families live has been severely restricted.

“The Trump administra­tion had no plans to keep track of the families or ever reunite them, and so that’s why we’re in the situation we’re in now, to try to account for each family,” said Nan Schivone, legal director of the organizati­on Justice in Motion, which is leading on-the-ground search efforts for separated families.

The American Civil Liberties Union, which is leading the court challenge to the family separation policy, said it had also been unable to find 362 of the children, many of whom are likely living in the United States, whose parents were deemed unreachabl­e.

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