U.S. wants help finding parents deported
without their children
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[August 03, 2018]
By Tom Hals
(Reuters) - The U.S. government told a
federal court judge on Thursday that volunteers and non-profit groups,
rather than government officials, should take the lead in locating more
than 400 immigrant parents who were separated from their children at the
U.S.-Mexico border and deported from the United States.
The proposal came in a San Diego Federal Court lawsuit challenging some
2,500 family separations initiated by the Trump administration as part
of its "zero tolerance" policy to curb illegal immigration.
In the case, brought by the American Civil Liberties Union, Judge Dana
Sabraw ordered the government to reunify the families by July 26, but
that deadline was not fully met.
While more than 1,900 children have been reunited with their families,
or seen their cases resolved in other ways, hundreds remain separated,
including the children of more than 400 parents no longer in the United
States, according to the government's latest filing.
In its plan for reuniting those families, filed with the court on
Thursday, attorneys from the Department of Justice said that the
government would supply what information it had about the deported
parents to the plaintiffs' attorneys.
At that point, the filing said, "plaintiffs' counsel should use their
considerable resources and their network of law firms, NGOs, volunteers,
and others," to establish contact with deported parents and determine
their wishes.
The ACLU has repeatedly said that it would assist with efforts to find
the deported parents, but the group made clear in Thursday's filing that
it expected the U.S. government to bear ultimate responsibility for
locating them.
Most of the removed parents were returned to their home countries of
Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador.
"Not only was it the government’s unconstitutional separation practice
that led to this crisis, but the United States Government has far more
resources than any group of NGOs," the ACLU said in the filing.
The ACLU noted that the government seemed not to have addresses for some
120 of the deported parents. Government lawyers said they would need
until Aug. 10 to go through the files of the children of those parents
to find information that could help in the search.
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Undocumented immigrants wait at a Greyhound bus station after being
released from detention in San Antonio, Texas, U.S. July 13, 2018.
REUTERS/Callaghan O'Hare/File Photo
Judge Sabraw will hold a hearing on Friday to discuss the ongoing
reunification efforts. He is also expected to decide soon when to
lift a stay that prohibits rapid deportation of reunited families.
Government lawyers told Sabraw last week that about 300 children
were in family detention centers, and could be deported quickly once
the judge allowed it.
The ACLU has argued that the reunified families need time to discuss
their options with legal counsel.
A separate class action lawsuit recently brought in the District of
Columbia on behalf of separated children seeks a separate stay on
deportations. That lawsuit said that minors should be allowed to
remain in the United States to pursue their legal rights apart from
their parents.
The Trump Administration ended family separations in June, after
weeks of international outcry over the policy.
(Reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware; Editing by Sue
Horton, Toni Reinhold)
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