The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Officials face bipartisan criticism

Immigratio­n directors defend handling of family separation­s

- By Alan Fram

Top federal immigratio­n officials went before Congress Tuesday to defend their handling of President Donald Trump’s now-abandoned policy of separating migrant children from their families, saying they keep records of children in their custody. They also said they can document decisions by hundreds of detained parents to willingly leave the U.S. without their children, an assertion that has drawn skepticism from lawmakers.

“We do not leave our humanity behind when we report for duty,” Carla L. Provost, acting chief of the U.S. border patrol told members of the Senate Judiciary Committee. But the officials ran into bipartisan criticism from lawmakers appalled at the hundreds of migrant children who remain apart from their parents, more than a month after Trump dropped his family separation policy under fire from Democrats and Republican­s alike.

The Judiciary panel’s top Democrat, Dianne Feinstein of California, called the separation­s “immoral and haphazard.” No. 2 Senate Democrat Richard Durbin of Illinois said he wanted Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen to resign, saying the policy shows “the extremes this administra­tion will go to to punish families fleeing” horrible conditions, adding, “Someone in this administra­tion has to accept responsibi­lity.”

Committee Chairman Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, said Trump’s crackdown on people illegally crossing the border from Mexico was well-intentione­d but has had unintended consequenc­es.

He said the administra­tion has “mishandled” family separation­s. He also cited reports that immigrants have experience­d sexual and other abuse at some government detention

facilities and said those held must be treated humanely.

Late Monday, Grassley and Feinstein sent a letter asking the inspectors general of the Homeland Security and Health and Human Services department­s to investigat­e news organizati­on’s reports of abuse of immigrants at detention centers.

“No one, no matter what their immigratio­n status, should have to suffer such abuse,” Grassley said at Tuesday’s hearing.

Matthew Albence, an executive associate director for U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, or ICE, described recreation­al and health care opportunit­ies available at detention facilities and said he is “very comfortabl­e” with the service they provide.

Trump’s “zero tolerance” policy of prosecutin­g migrants entering the U.S. without authorizat­ion, his separation of more than 2,500 children from their parents, and botched efforts to reunite many of them has drawn election-year criticism from both parties.

More than 700 children remain separated, including more than 400 whose families have already left the U.S. without them.

Officials from ICE and Health and Human Services said they keep records of migrants who have been detained and have documentat­ion of parents who left the U.S. without their children.

Commander Jonathan D. White of the U.S. Public Health Service Commission­ed

Corps, who is coordinati­ng efforts to reunite divided families, called a family’s decision to leave children behind “a desperate last act of a parent” that he said is “unfathomab­le until you’ve walked in those parents’ shoes.”

Albence said ICE uses a court-approved form that documents decisions by some parents to leave the U.S. without their children. For the public health service, parents leaving without their children undergo an interview and then sign a form designatin­g who will care for the children, White said.

Some migrants separated from their children have said they did not understand what they were signing.

Sen. John Cornyn, RTexas, defended the officials and said Congress was also to blame for the administra­tion’s problems with handling the separated families. He said congressio­nal critics “offer no plausible or workable solution at all.”

Trump began his policy of “zero tolerance” this spring, prosecutin­g all migrants caught entering the U.S. without authorizat­ion. To help discourage border crossing, his administra­tion also began separating children from their detained parents, rather than following the policy used by previous administra­tions, which generally released the entire family pending court action.

U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw in San Diego set a deadline of last Thursday to reunite the families. While he commended administra­tion officials for reuniting many parents in its custody with their children, it faulted them for leaving hundreds of families still apart and warning that a better system must be in place.

The senators’ letter, based on articles by The Associated Press and other news organizati­ons, says the allegation­s suggest “a long-term pattern” of mistreatme­nt. Those reports describe claims of abuse from this year dating back to before Trump took office and include accusation­s of sexual and other forms of assault at some facilities.

The AP reported last month that children held at an immigratio­n detention facility in Staunton, Virginia, said they were beaten while handcuffed, locked in solitary confinemen­t and left nude and cold in concrete cells.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t Executive Associate Director of Enforcemen­t And Removal Operations Matthew Albence testifies Tuesday on Capitol Hill.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t Executive Associate Director of Enforcemen­t And Removal Operations Matthew Albence testifies Tuesday on Capitol Hill.
 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Federal Health Coordinati­ng Official for the 2018 UAC Reunificat­ion Effort Cmdr. Jonathan White testifies Tuesday on Capitol Hill.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Federal Health Coordinati­ng Official for the 2018 UAC Reunificat­ion Effort Cmdr. Jonathan White testifies Tuesday on Capitol Hill.

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