Trump Admin Says It Wants Two Years To Find Immigrant Kids Separated From Parents

TIJUANA, MEXICO - APRIL 04: A Honduran mother stands with her daughters in the migrant shelter where they are currently living near the U.S.-Mexico border on April 4, 2019 in Tijuana, Mexico. She said they are on the... TIJUANA, MEXICO - APRIL 04: A Honduran mother stands with her daughters in the migrant shelter where they are currently living near the U.S.-Mexico border on April 4, 2019 in Tijuana, Mexico. She said they are on the waiting list to apply for asylum in the U.S. and must wait at the shelter for now. U.S. President Donald Trump said today he will delay closing the U.S. Southern border for one year. (Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images) MORE LESS
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SAN DIEGO (AP) — The Trump administration wants up to two years to find potentially thousands of children who were separated from their families at the border before a judge halted the practice last year, a task that it says is more laborious than previous efforts because the children are no longer in government custody.

The Justice Department said in a court filing late Friday that it will take at least a year to review about 47,000 cases of unaccompanied children taken into government custody between July 1, 2017 and June 25, 2018 — the day before U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw halted the general practice of splitting families. The administration would begin by sifting through names for traits most likely to signal separation — for example, children under 5.

The administration would provide information on separated families on a rolling basis to the American Civil Liberties Union, which sued to reunite families and criticized the proposed timeline on Saturday.

“We strongly oppose a plan that could take up to two years to locate these families,” said Lee Gelernt, the ACLU’s lead attorney. “The government needs to make this a priority.”

Sabraw ordered last year that more than 2,700 children in government care on June 26, 2018 be reunited with their families, which has largely been accomplished. Then, in January, the U.S. Health and Human Services Department’s internal watchdog reported that thousands more children may have been separated since the summer of 2017. The department’s inspector general said the precise number was unknown.

The judge ruled last month that he could hold the government accountable for families that were separated before his June order and asked the government submit a proposal for the next steps. A hearing is scheduled April 16.

Sheer volume makes the job different than identifying children who were in custody at the time of the judge’s June order, Jonathan White, a commander of the U.S. Public Health Service and Health and Human Services’ point person on family reunification, said in an affidavit.

White, whose work has drawn strong praise from the judge, would lead the effort to identify additional families on behalf of Health and Health and Human Services with counterparts at Customs and Border Protection and U.S. Immigration and Customs and Enforcement. Dr. Barry Graubard, a statistics expert at the National Cancer Institute, developed a system to flag for early attention those most likely to have been separated.

The vast majority of separated children are released to relatives, but many are not parents. Of children released in the 2017 fiscal year, 49 percent went to parents, 41 percent to close relatives such as an aunt, uncle, grandparent or adult sibling and 10 percent to distant relatives, family friends and others.

The government’s proposed model to flag still-separated children puts a higher priority on the roughly half who were not released to a parent. Other signs of likely separation include children under 5, younger children traveling without a sibling and those who were detained in the Border Patrol’s El Paso, Texas, sector, where the administration ran a trial program that involved separating nearly 300 family members from July to November 2017.

Saturday marks the anniversary of the administration’s “zero tolerance” policy to criminally prosecute every adult who enters the country illegally from Mexico. The administration retreated in June amid an international uproar by generally exempting adults who come with their children. The policy now applies only to single adults.

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  1. Completely unacceptable. NOW.

  2. This book is tangentially related to what happens when small children are forcibly separated from their families. Just finished reading is this morning, it’s good and well researched.

    Now for the subject at hand. This is shameful. This is outrageous. This is something that will not go away in two years, we will being dealing with the harm our government imposed on these children and family for decades.

  3. Avatar for paulw paulw says:

    “It’s inconvenient for us to obey the law or to repair the results of our violation” swayed very few judges ever.

    How about incarcerations for criminal contempt for the top of the chain of command, at a rate of one day per child-day lost?

  4. NYT published this almost a year ago about emotional damage to children separated from their parents. No one in the admin knows or cares what they’ve done to the children. Bottom line, they’re going to be damaged adults. The longer they’re held, the longer it will take to regain emotional stability

    Some youngsters retreat entirely, their eyes empty, bodies limp, their isolation a wall of defiance. Others cannot sit still: watchful, hyperactive, ever uncertain.

    Some compulsively jump into the laps of strangers, or grab their legs and hold on for life. And some children, somehow, move past a sudden separation from their parents, tapping a well of resilience.

    @lastroth The excerpt at Amazon is long enough to get a good sense of how it reads, thanks for that, I’ve put it on hold at the library.

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