Trump administration will fingerprint
child migrants' parents
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[May 30, 2018]
By Yeganeh Torbati
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Trump
administration will soon begin fingerprinting parents claiming custody
of children who entered the United States illegally without an adult
relative, officials said on Tuesday, prompting criticism that children
may be abandoned by those who fear being identified and deported.
Currently, most parents are not required to be fingerprinted to get
custody of their children.
U.S. laws and legal precedent limit the time juveniles can be detained,
so those caught crossing the border alone are often released to adult
sponsors in the United States. The children are then expected to show up
to immigration court to fight their deportation cases.
"We're going to more thoroughly vet sponsors," said Steven Wagner,
acting assistant secretary of the Department of Health and Human
Services' (HHS) Administration for Children and Families, in a telephone
briefing with reporters. "With DHS' cooperation we will conduct a
fingerprint-based background check on every sponsor."
HHS is ultimately responsible for finding housing for migrant children,
and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) enforces immigration
policy. Under a new memorandum, DHS would help HHS fingerprint every
individual claiming custody of a child, senior officials said.
A DHS official who declined to be named said they expect implementation
in a few weeks.
Immigrant advocates said the new policy would discourage parents from
claiming their children.
"This policy will undoubtedly make it more likely that qualified
sponsors will hide in the shadows, leaving vulnerable young children to
languish in immigration jail," said Rich Leimsider, executive director
of the Safe Passage Project, which represents immigrant children in New
York, in an email to Reuters.
Wagner, during the briefing, dismissed such concerns.
"If somebody is unwilling to claim their child from custody because
they're concerned about their own immigration status, I think that de
facto calls into question whether they're an adequate sponsor and
whether we should be releasing the child to that person," Wagner said.
In March and April, more than 50,000 people were detained per month
trying to cross the southwest border illegally, levels similar to those
during the administration of Barack Obama, according to U.S. government
figures. During those two months a total of about 8,400 unaccompanied
minors were caught on the southwest border.
Soon after President Donald Trump's inauguration in January 2017, border
crossings briefly dropped to record lows before creeping back up again
at the end of last year. The increase has frustrated Trump, who has
repeatedly called for more action.
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Children traveling with a caravan of migrants from Central America
stand on the beach and near the border fence between Mexico and the
U.S., prior to preparations for an asylum request in the U.S., in
Tijuana, Mexico April 29, 2018. REUTERS/Edgard Garrido
A controversy erupted after Wagner testified in April before a
Senate committee that the agency in 2016 conducted a limited "safety
and well-being" call to around 7,600 children that had been in its
care but was unable to locate around 1,500 children and their
sponsors.
On Tuesday, Wagner said many children are with people who are in the
country illegally and that "there's no reason to believe that
anything has happened to those kids."
Currently, all sponsors of unaccompanied children undergo an
interview and a background check, and non-parental sponsors undergo
fingerprint checks of a Federal Bureau of Investigation database. In
special cases, such as when there is a "documented risk" to the
safety of the child, parents will undergo fingerprint checks as
well, according to the HHS website.
Background checks and interviews may turn up immigration
information, which is entered into an HHS web portal, but
immigration status is not used to disqualify sponsors. HHS cannot
"deny placement" based on immigration status, Wagner said.
From January 2014 to April 2015, 60 percent of unaccompanied
children from El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras were released to a
parent, about a third were released to other relatives, 8 percent to
family friends and less than 1 percent was released to unrelated
sponsors, according to a 2018 Government Accountability Office
report.
During the Obama administration, officials at U.S. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement proposed that anyone claiming custody of
unaccompanied alien children be fingerprinted. HHS officials at the
time pushed back, arguing that it would delay family reunions and
infringe upon the parent-child relationship.
(Additional reporting by Mica Rosenberg in New York; Editing by
Richard Chang)
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