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		Former Trump Attorney General Sessions regrets migrant family 
		separations
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		 [March 03, 2021] 
		By Ted Hesson 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Jeff Sessions, the 
		top official behind former President Donald Trump's "zero-tolerance" 
		border strategy, says it was "unfortunate" that migrant children and 
		parents were not reunited quickly after being split apart at the 
		U.S.-Mexico border.
 
 Thousands of children were separated from their parents at the border 
		under the 2018 Trump policy, which charged parents with federal 
		immigration offenses and sent them to jails, while children were labeled 
		"unaccompanied" and placed in shelters.
 
 In a phone interview on Tuesday, Sessions defended the prosecutions, 
		saying a person traveling with a child "shouldn't be given immunity." He 
		expressed regret, however, that the Trump administration could not 
		quickly reunite the parents and children afterward.
 
		
		 
		"It was unfortunate, very unfortunate, that somehow the government was 
		not able to manage those children in a way that they could be reunited 
		properly," Sessions said. "It turned out to be more of a problem than I 
		think any of us imagined it would be."
 Launched in April 2018, Trump's "zero-tolerance" policy provoked 
		widespread criticism, leading the Republican president to effectively 
		reverse it months later. President Joe Biden, a Democrat who took office 
		on Jan. 20, created a task force in February to reunite families still 
		separated by the policy, calling it a "stain" on the reputation of the 
		United States.
 
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			Former U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions speaks after results are 
			announced for his candidacy in the Republican Party U.S. Senate 
			primary in Mobile, Alabama, U.S. March 3, 2020. REUTERS/Elijah 
			Nouvelage/File Photo 
            
			 
            Efforts are still ongoing in court to locate the parents of more 
			than 500 separated children.
 Trump publicly criticized Sessions during his time as attorney 
			general for recusing himself from overseeing a probe into Russian 
			interference in the 2016 election. Still, Sessions aggressively 
			implemented Trump's hardline immigration agenda before being ousted 
			by Trump in November 2018.
 
 A U.S. Department of Justice internal watchdog report released in 
			January said Sessions' office was "a driving force" in the Trump 
			administration decision to refer families for criminal prosecution 
			and that Sessions himself was aware it could lead to family 
			separations.
 
 The report said the attorney general's office did not sufficiently 
			coordinate with other agencies, underestimated the complexity of the 
			policy and "demonstrated a deficient understanding of the legal 
			requirements related to the care and custody of separated children."
 
 (Reporting by Ted Hesson in Washington; Editing by Ross Colvin and 
			Peter Cooney)
 
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