Feds: 711 Immigrant Children Can't Be Reunited With Parents Ahead Of Deadline

<p>The Trump administration&nbsp;struggled to meet a court-imposed deadline&nbsp;Thursday for reuniting&nbsp;immigrant children and their parents.&nbsp;</p>

Thursday, July 26th 2018, 7:13 pm

By: News 9


The Trump administration struggled to meet a court-imposed deadline Thursday for reuniting immigrant children and their parents. Nearly 2,600 children ages 5 years and older were separated at the U.S.-Mexico border.

The government announced Thursday evening that 1,820 of those children have been reunited with their parents, while 711 children remain in custody because their parents or relatives are ineligible for reunification.

Read Also: Jeff Merkley Slams Trump Admin. As ‘Incompetent’, ‘Callous’ In Handling Family Separation

Romela Victoria Isaula and her 13-year-old son Geronimo were finally reunited after crossing the border near El Paso in May and being separated for two months.

"I am so happy because I have her close," Geronimo said through a translator.

Now they are heading to Massachusetts where they'll wait for a judge to decide whether they'll be granted asylum or sent back to Honduras.

The teenager is one of more than 1,800 children recently reunified with a parent or other family member. However, more than 400 of the 711 still in custody have parents who may have already been deported.

"I'm worried here that we have 460 parents who have now been deported to Central America and there is a very high likelihood that those parents are not going to see their children again," said John Sandweg, a former acting director of Immigration Customs Enforcement.

Immigration attorneys say the government is making unilateral decisions that include a parents' health condition and possible criminal history, with no oversight.

"There's a lot of concern that those standards are being inconsistently applied, or parents are being arbitrarily denied access to their children," Sandweg pointed out.

For the hundreds of ineligible children, shelters will continue to be their home while the government figures out its next move.

Meanwhile, the ACLU is asking the federal judge for a new deadline of August 1 for more information on the reunifications which would the government's feet to the fire. Thursday afternoon, the Department of Justice announced they will have reunified all eligible families by the end of the day.

SEE: Most Americans Oppose Immigrant Family Separation 

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