Judge encouraged by U.S. plan to reunite
separated immigrant families
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[August 11, 2018]
By Jonathan Stempel
(Reuters) - A federal judge on Friday said
he was encouraged by a new U.S. plan to reunite parents and children who
had been separated at the U.S.-Mexican border under President Donald
Trump's now-abandoned "zero tolerance" policy toward illegal immigrants.
The reunification plan set forth in a Thursday night court filing
described several processes to locate parents who had been removed from
the country, determine their intentions for their children, and ensure
that children remain safe.
"There's no question the government has put in a great deal of thought
into this," U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw in San Diego said at a
hearing.
Sabraw also said the plan "appears to be a very good one, a sound one,
at least from a broad-brush perspective."
The plan provided that the government would resolve concerns about the
children's safety and parentage.
It also called for the government to work with the American Civil
Liberties Union and foreign governments to locate parents and determine
their wishes, and arrange travel documents and transportation for
children when parents opt for reunification.
Sabraw has been monitoring the government's progress in reuniting 2,551
children with their parents since ordering their reunifications on June
26.
The ACLU had brought a lawsuit that led to Sabraw's reunification order.
Many of those separated had crossed the border illegally, while others
had sought asylum at a border crossing.
Trump abandoned the separation policy on June 20 after broad criticism
at home and internationally.
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Undocumented immigrant families are released from detention at a bus
depot in McAllen, Texas, U.S., July 27, 2018. REUTERS/Loren
Elliott/File Photo
At Friday's hearing, ACLU lawyer Lee Gelernt said he had some
concerns about the government's reunification plan.
Sabraw gave the ACLU the weekend to study the plan and discuss its
concerns with the government, and bring unresolved issues to his
attention by Monday morning.
He also praised the government and ACLU for "really working
collaboratively, which is absolutely essential" for reunifications.
The judge's comments marked a change from a week earlier, when he
called the government's progress in reunifying families
"unacceptable."
Roughly 559 of the 2,551 children remain in federal custody, down
from 572 a week earlier, according to a separate Thursday court
filing. They included 386 whose parents had been removed from the
country, that filing said.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Tom Brown)
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