This came out earlier this month. This is so terribly distressing and tragic and I don't see this getting the ink that it deserves.
-Angela
#FamiliesBelongTogether, #familiestornapart
By Ron Nixon
·
Sept. 18, 2018
·
WASHINGTON — The Trump administration is unable to account for
the whereabouts of nearly 1,500 migrant children who illegally entered the
United States alone this year and were placed with sponsors after leaving
federal shelters, according to congressional findings released on Tuesday.
The revelation echoes an admission in April by the Department of
Health and Human Services that the government had similarly lost track of an additional 1,475
migrant children it had moved out of shelters last year.
In findings that
lawmakers described as troubling, Senate investigators said the department
could not determine with certainty the whereabouts of 1,488 out of 11,254
children the agency had placed with sponsors in 2018, based on follow-up calls
from April 1 to June 30.
The inability to track
the whereabouts of migrant children after they have been released to sponsors
has raised concerns that they could end up with human traffickers or be used as
laborers by people posing as relatives.
Since 2016, officials at the Department of Health and Human
Services have called sponsors to check on children 30 days after they were
placed there. But the department has also said it was not legally responsible
for children after they were released from the custody of its office of refugee
resettlement.
Caitlin Oakley, a spokeswoman for the Department of Health and
Human Services, offered a response to the findings on Tuesday night. “As
communicated to members of Congress multiple times,” she said, “these children
are not ‘lost.’ Their sponsors — who are usually parents or family members and
in all cases have been vetted for criminality and ability to provide for them —
simply did not respond or could not be reached when this voluntary call was
made.”
The findings were accompanied by legislation introduced on
Tuesday by Republican and Democrat senators to clarify the department’s
responsibility for ensuring the safety of migrant children, even when they were
no longer in its custody.
The legislation would require officials at the Department of
Health and Human Services to run background checks before placing children with
sponsors. It also would compel the department to make sure that sponsors
provide proper care for the children in their custody, including making sure
they appear at their immigration court hearings.
Additionally, the
legislation would require department officials to notify state governments
before migrant children are placed with sponsors in those states. And it would
increase the number of immigration court judges to help the Justice Department
process cases more efficiently.
Senator Rob Portman, Republican of Ohio and the chairman of a
Senate Homeland Security subcommittee on investigations, said the bill “will
ensure that we keep track of unaccompanied minors in our country, which will
both help protect them from trafficking and abuse as well as help ensure they
appear for their immigration court proceedings.”
Senator Richard Blumenthal Democrat of Connecticut, who also
sponsored the legislation, said, “Children who risk their lives to make a
dangerous journey in pursuit of asylum shouldn’t then have to worry about
falling victim to human trafficking or being handed over to abusive or
neglectful adults in the United States.”
In a report two years ago, the Senate subcommittee detailed how
department officials mistakenly placed eight children with human traffickers
who forced them to work on an egg farm in Marion, Ohio.
The report found that department officials had failed to
establish procedures — including sufficient background checks and following up
with sponsors — to protect the children who were traveling alone. As a result,
the children were turned over to the traffickers who contracted them out to the
egg farm.
Since October 2014, the Department
of Health and Human Services has placed more than 135,000 unaccompanied
immigrant children with adult sponsors in the United States as they wait for
their cases to be heard by an immigration judge.
Robert Pear contributed reporting.
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