U.S. says it will separate families
crossing border illegally
Send a link to a friend
[May 08, 2018]
By Jennifer McEntee and Mica Rosenberg
SAN DIEGO/NEW YORK (Reuters) - The Trump
administration will increase criminal prosecutions of parents entering
the United States illegally and place their children in protective
custody, stepping up efforts to tighten immigration enforcement, U.S.
officials said on Monday.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Thomas Homan, acting director of U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement, said the policy was not new and
that the government was expanding procedures already in place. They were
speaking at Friendship Park, San Diego, at the U.S.-Mexico border.
"We have always separated families under two situations, one when we
can't establish them as a parent and that child is being trafficked,"
Homan said, adding that migrant smugglers sometimes pose as parents to
children that are not theirs. "The second situation when we separate is
when we prosecute."
"People are dying trying to enter this country. There is a right way to
do and a wrong way to do it," Homan said, who has announced that he
would retire this year.
In April, Sessions announced a "zero tolerance" policy in which illegal
entrants to the United States would be prosecuted in federal court.
Previously, people apprehended crossing the border illegally were often
deported without being criminally charged.
A person stopped by the border patrol and referred to a federal court to
face charges is taken to jail by the U.S. Marshals Service and any of
their children traveling with them are placed in government custody,
with the Office of Refugee Resettlement, Sessions said.
"If we do our duty to prosecute most cases, then children inevitably for
a period of time might be held," Sessions said, speaking over shouts
from a protestor with a bull-horn and mariachi music played by a band on
the Mexico side.
Reuters first reported the government's idea to separate parents and
children apprehended at the border in March 2017.
[to top of second column]
|
In April, the administration said it was no longer considering such
action because of a decline in apprehensions of families at the U.S.
border with Mexico.
Apprehensions have now risen to levels seen during the
administration of former President Barack Obama, frustrating
President Donald Trump, who has made illegal immigration a focal
point of his administration.
"Illegal immigration must end!" Trump tweeted on Friday.
Immigration advocates have said that separations of children from
parents have been happening for months. The American Civil Liberties
Union filed a lawsuit in February to challenge the practice.
An official with the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), speaking
on condition of anonymity, said on Monday that the agency had signed
onto the policy on Friday.
Families seeking asylum should turn themselves into authorities so
their petitions can be processed instead of attempting to cross
illegally, the official said.
The DHS said on Monday that there had been about 30,000 prosecution
referrals since the start of the 2018 fiscal year in October, up
from 18,642 prosecutions for the entire 2017 fiscal year.
Sessions was scheduled to speak earlier on Monday in Arizona. In
prepared remarks, he said the United States would also prosecute
immigrants who pay smugglers to bring children across the border.
(Reporting by Jennifer McEntee in San Diego and Mica Rosenberg in
New York; additional reporting David Shepardson in Washington;
Editing by Sue Horton and Rosalba O'Brien)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |