Trump
Separates Immigrant Families, Losing Children in a Screwed-Up Detention System
By Terry H. Schwadron, DCReport New York
Editor
In a tweet, Trump criticized Democrats for a law that calls
for separation of immigrant families who
cross the border illegally, sending children into detention centers to assure
that parents will show up for deportation meetings.
It is a horrible practice, but the policy is that of the Trump
administration, not the Democrats, and it’s not a law.
In a tweet, Trump urged Americans to “put pressure” on the
Democrats to “end the horrible law that separates children from there [sic] parents.”
This is the separation policy that his own administration put
into effect last month, and was underscored in a speech in early May by Atty.
Gen. Jeff Sessions.
It is true that the policy has run into criticism for the
dehumanization of people, and even as bad immigration policy.
It has led to court confrontations over medical treatments
for minors under detention, including at least two cases involving directed
overturning of attempts by the government to stop to unwanted abortions.
But mainly it is seen as an unseemly way to force parents to
show up for deportation hearings.
On top of all that, the government apparently has lost some of
its detainees in the mix.
In Senate testimony, last month, Steve Wagner, acting assistant
secretary of the Health and Human Services department charged with housing
under-age immigrants along the border said that the government was unable to locate nearly 1,500 children who
had been released from its custody.
Wagner insisted that the federal agency
is “not legally responsible for children”
once they’ have been handed over to a sponsor.
Rep. Ted Lieu (D-Calif.) took Melania Trump to task in light of her new “Be Best” mission for children. “Separating toddlers from parents is definitely not a ‘Be Best’ policy,” he tweeted. “Are you going to do anything about it?”
Until recently, families that illegally crossed the Mexican
border together generally faced civil deportation proceedings.
But as of May, the Trump administration is sending all parents to jails run by
the U.S. Marshals Service. Because migrant children cannot be held in jails, they are placed
elsewhere by the HHS Office of Refugee Resettlement.
Before the Trump administration, the office handled children who
crossed the border alone.
White House chief of staff John Kelly, who called the harsh new
policy a “technique” and a “tough deterrent,” explained earlier this month to
NPR: “They’ll be sent to foster care—or whatever. But
the big point is they elected to come illegally into the United States.”
Senate testimony that was released last
month but came to light more recently details how the Office of Refugee
Resettlement (ORR)—part of the Department of Health and Human Services—“was
unable to determine with certainty the whereabouts of 1,475 [children].”
Wagner said the ORR was tasked between October and December 2017
with checking on the welfare of the more than 7,000 children supposedly placed
into the homes of a sponsor or guardian.
Along with the nearly 1,500 missing children, an additional 28
ran away and 52 were living with someone other than their initial sponsor,
according to the testimony.
In 2017, more than 40,000 children were taken from the
U.S.-Mexico border by the Department of Homeland Security and handed over to
the ORR.
One of those problems apparently included a terrifying 2014
mistake in which the ORR released several minors to human traffickers.
“This is as horrific a policy as I’ve seen in
25-plus years doing civil rights work,” Lee Gelernt, an attorney with the
ACLU’s Immigrant Rights Project, told the Huffington Post, adding, “No child
should be sent to these government facilities if they don’t have to be, especially
with all these problems in the ORR system.”
What happens when a child can’t be located by the ORR? Nothing, if the system continues to stay in place.
What happens when a child can’t be located by the ORR? Nothing, if the system continues to stay in place.
Wagner said he would be taking a “fresh look” at whether the
office should have more responsibility to protect the children it takes and
gives away.
But he also clarified to the subcommittee that if the office
were to more rigorously keep track of the immigrant kids, the ORR would need “a
significant expansion of the current program structure and an increase in
resources.”
All this comes as reports mount of a growing unhappiness between
Trump and Kirstjen Nielsen, Secretary of Homeland Security, over the beginnings
of seasonal rises in the numbers of illegal border crossings.
“As illegal crossings are once more on
the rise and Trump hears a cascade of criticism from conservative allies,
Nielsen finds herself on the receiving end of the president’s visceral anger
about immigration,” according to the Washington Post.
It seems clear that Trump has little regard for facts or for
preparation, and is quick to blame someone, anyone, for whatever he finds makes
him unhappy. The question this time is whether he can hear himself—and just
stop what seems like cruel separations of immigrant families.