Hurdles facing parents and children
separated at U.S. border
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[June 20, 2018]
(Reuters) - Over 2,300 children were
separated from their parents at the U.S.-Mexico border between May 5 and
June 9 under the Trump administration's "zero tolerance" policy, U.S.
Customs and Border Protection said on Tuesday, and immigration advocates
and legal experts say there is no clear system in place to reunite them.
The policy directs border officials to refer for prosecution all
immigrants apprehended while crossing the U.S.-Mexico border illegally.
Parents who are no longer detained "are entitled to get their kids back
through a documented process," U.S. Department of Homeland Security
Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said.
When are children and parents separated?
Immigrants arrested near the southwestern border are taken to processing
centers where officials refer some to federal court to be prosecuted
under the U.S. criminal entry statute. Parents referred for prosecution
are transferred into U.S. Marshals custody and separated from their
children.
Immigrants charged with the misdemeanor crime of illegal entry often
plead guilty in group hearings and receive a sentence of a few days in
prison or "time served," at which point they are transferred back to a
processing facility and quickly deported unless they claim a "credible
fear" of returning to their home country.
Meanwhile, their children are transferred into the custody of the Office
of Refugee Resettlement (ORR), part of the Department of Health and
Human Services, which manages facilities that care for minors. There are
100 sites scattered across 17 states and they can be on the other side
of the country from their parents.
Children get their own case in immigration court and are entitled to a
full hearing by an immigration judge, a process that can take months.
How can parents contact their children?
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) said it has posted
information in all facilities at which parents are detained for over 72
hours, advising them to call a hotline for assistance in finding their
child. The agency said it will work together with ORR to locate
separated children, verify the relationship and set up regular
communication and removal coordination if necessary.
There are two hotlines, one run by ICE and one by ORR. Advocates say the
wait times on these calls can be upwards of 30 minutes and parents are
required to call back when a child cannot immediately be located.
How can the parents be reunited with their children?
ICE said it "will make every effort to reunite the child with the
parent" once the parent's case has been adjudicated.
If the parent is being deported, ICE said it will work with ORR to
reunite them with their child at the time of deportation and with the
consulate representing their country to assist the parent with obtaining
a travel document for the child.
In some cases, the parent may decide they want their child to stay in
the United States to pursue their own asylum claim, or the child may
themselves choose to seek asylum. In other cases, children may ask to
return to their home countries to be reunited with their parents.
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A flyer released by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
June 19, 2018, shows information being distributed in U.S.-Mexico
border facilities at which immigrant parents are being detained.
U.S. Department of Homeland Security/Handout via REUTERS
Advocates said the reunification process is ad hoc.
Anthony Enriquez, director of the unaccompanied minors program for
Catholic Charities Community Services in New York said there was no
systematic effort in place to ensure the children and their parents
are reunited.
"I go to court to tell the judges this under oath," Enriquez said.
"There's no process."
He said reunification relies on individual government officials who
go above and beyond their duties to help the families reunite or a
lawyer from a non-governmental legal organization doing that work.
Robert Carey, who ran the Office for Refugee Resettlement under
President Barack Obama said he would be surprised if systems were in
place for reunifying families as the new zero tolerance policy was
put in place quickly and "it takes time to coordinate across
multiple agencies."
Have parents been deported without their children?
Immigration attorneys say there have been many cases of parents
deported without their children. The advocacy group Kids In Need of
Defense (KIND) said of the 40 case referrals involving family
separation they have received since July 2017 through their child
migrant return and reintegration project, 32 involved parents
deported before their children and 15 of those cases involved
children who were five years old or younger.
In some cases, parents are deported before finding their children in
ORR custody, said Lisa Frydman, a KIND attorney.
"We've had other cases where the child goes to ORR and they do not
know where parent is, and the parent doesn’t know where child is,"
Frydman said.
Some children remain in the United States months after their parents
are being deported, she said. Parents who have been deported back to
countries such as Guatemala and Honduras without their children are
reaching out to local organizations asking for help locating them.
(Reporting by Kristina Cooke in San Francisco, Reade Levinson in New
York and Yeganeh Torbati in Washington; editing by Grant McCool)
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