Children and Families Separated at the Border Democratic Law

The Trump administration received its first official tongue-lashing Th past a Democratic-led committee over the "zero tolerance" policy that has led to thousands of migrant family separations along the southern border.

Ane by one, Democratic members labeled the policy, announced last year past and so-Chaser General Jeff Sessions and implemented by the Department of Homeland Security, as shameful, abhorrent and a "stain on the conscience of the U.S."

"I actually recollect that what we're talking about is country-sponsored kid corruption, and I would go as far as to say kidnapping of children," said Rep. Jan Schakowsky, D-Sick., during the hearing of the Committee on Free energy and Commerce'due south oversight subcommittee.

Further enraging those members was the access from a Department of Health and Human Services official and several government investigators that the practise of family separations really started a year before Sessions' public annunciation in Apr 2018 and that it continues to this day, admitting in smaller numbers.

Since the assistants has not completed a process to place and track all separated families, information technology's unknown how many children were separated and are notwithstanding beingness separated.

"Exactly how many children were separated is unknown," testified Ann Maxwell, assistant inspector general at Wellness and Human being Services.

Cmdr. Jonathan White, who oversaw the care of minors for HHS, said he raised concerns about the mass separation of families every bit far back as February 2017 when he noticed an increase in the number of separated children entering the system.

He told the committee he warned his superiors that a family separation policy would lead to psychological trauma for the children and would overwhelm the power of the department'south Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR), which takes custody of migrant minors, to care for those children.

White said he was told in 2017 that no such policy existed. "I was told family separation wasn't going to happen," White said.

Then, in April 2018, he saw Sessions announce that very policy on TV. White said he was never consulted on that policy, and had he been asked, he would have fought it.

"Neither I nor any career person in ORR would ever have supported such a policy proposal," White said. "Separating children from their parents poses pregnant risks of traumatic psychological injury to the child. The consequences of separation for many children will be lifelong."

Attorney General Jeff Sessions testifies during a US Senate Select Committee on Intelligence hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, June 13, 2017.

The family separation practice was supposed to cease after a public outcry prompted President Donald Trump to sign an executive gild overturning it. A few days later, a federal guess ordered that all separated families must be reunited. Thursday, White said most of that piece of work has been completed.

"Of the 2,816 children that we were able to identify as separated, only six remain who might potentially still be reunified," he said.

Several government officials testified Thursday that the family separation do continues and that the administration has made information technology hard to empathise why.

Maxwell, the assistant inspector general for HHS, said families can be legally separated if the parent is deemed to be a danger to the child. She said Homeland Security agents give only "limited data" about the separations when they hand the separated children over to HHS to intendance for them.

White said a deject exists over that separation process and urged members of the committee to pass a law to ameliorate define when a parent can be deemed a danger to the child, prompting a legal separation.

"The national give-and-take, including the word for legislators, is specifically what are the legitimate criteria for separation," White said. "If yous want to see that, that'southward on y'all."

More:Watchdog: Thousands more than migrant children may accept been separated at border than reported

More:Families still being separated at border – months later on Trump's 'zero tolerance' policy reversed

Thursday's hearing marked the first try by Democrats to conduct oversight of the Trump assistants's ever-expanding clearing enforcement efforts.

Democratic leaders vowed to explore all of the president's controversial moves to limit legal and illegal immigration, including his travel ban targeting majority-Muslim countries, his efforts to unilaterally limit asylum for Central American families and the family separations that were at the heart of Thursday's hearing.

The administration and lawmakers have grappled over the almost basic aspects of the oversight process.

Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen got into a public spat with Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., chair of the Homeland Security Committee, over her refusal to testify equally requested this week. Instead, Nielsen will appear before the committee March half-dozen.

HHS Secretarial assistant Alex Azar turned downwardly a request to evidence at Thursday's hearing, arguing that the committee should talk with policy experts in the department who better understand the details of how the department operates. Rep. Diana DeGette, D-Colo., chairwoman of the oversight subcommittee, criticized Azar during Th's hearing for refusing to show up, telling White that it was unfair that Azar was "passing the cadet" onto him.

No representatives from Homeland Security or Justice attended Th's hearing.

Committee members discussed several options for Congress to improve oversight of family separations and to assist those families that take gone through that process.

American Civil Liberties Wedlock chaser Lee Gelernt, who led a lawsuit that forced the administration to reunite separated families, said the regime needs to exist held accountable for its actions. He said Congress should force the administration to figure out all families that were separated, create a amend system for determining when parents can be deemed a danger to their child, consummate a tracking organisation for separated families and provide fiscal assistance to separated families to assistance them deal with the medical care they'll need.

He told the story of a mother whose children, ages four and 10, were taken from her. When they were reunited, the younger child kept asking, "Are they going to come and take me abroad once again in the middle of the dark?"

"That'due south what's going on with these children, any sense of stability has been shattered," Gelernt said. "Without real medical assistance, I think it's going to exist actually difficult for them to recover."

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Source: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2019/02/07/democrats-trump-administration-family-separation-policy-border-immigration/2794324002/

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