Reuniting thousands of migrant families will take up to 2 years, government lawyers say

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They told a federal judge the task will be onerous, claiming most of the children have been released from government custody to live with sponsors.
Image: FILES-US-IMMIGRATION-POLITICS-MIGRANTS-JUSTICE
Immigrants head to a Catholic Charities relief center after being dropped off at a bus station shortly after being released from detention in McAllen, Texas, in June.Loren Elliot / AFP - Getty Images file

WASHINGTON — Lawyers representing the Trump administration told the federal judge overseeing the reunification of separated migrant families that it will take one to two years to identify potentially thousands of children.

U.S. District Court Judge Dana Sabraw in California ordered last month that children separated before the administration's "zero tolerance" policy went into effect should be identified.

Image: President Trump's "Zero Tolerance" Mexico Border Policy Stirs Controversy And Confusion
A migrant mother walks with her two daughters on their way to the port of entry to ask for asylum in the U.S. last June in Tijuana, Mexico.Mario Tama / Getty Images

The order followed a report by the Department of Health and Human Services Inspector General that estimated thousands of children were separated before zero tolerance, the May-June 2018 policy that systematically separated children from migrant parents who crossed the border illegally.

After reuniting the majority of the more than 2,800 children separated during zero tolerance, the Trump administration resisted identifying and reuniting those children separated prior to the policy.

Lawyers for the Justice Department said the task was onerous, claiming most of those children have been released from government custody to live with sponsors.

Now, the lawyers for the administration "estimate that identifying all possible children...referred to and discharged by (Health and Human Services)...would take at least 12 months and possibly up to 24 months," according to a filing in the Southern District of California late Friday.

Lee Gelernt, the ACLU's lead attorney in a lawsuit against the Trump administration over family separations, said Saturday that up to two years is too long.

“We strongly oppose any plan that would give the government up to two years to find these children. The government’s proposed plan reflects the administration’s continuing refusal to treat these separations with the urgency they deserve," he said.

"We are talking about the lives of children, potentially thousands of them," he continued. "The government was able to quickly gather resources to tear these children away from their families and now they need to gather the resources to fix the damage.”

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