U. S. President Donald Trump |
The U.S. government said in a
court filing on Friday that it has the right to detain children and parents
caught crossing the U.S. border illegally for the duration of their immigration
proceedings.
A 1997 court settlement known as the Flores agreement has
generally been interpreted to require the Department of Homeland Security to
release illegal immigrant children from custody after 20 days.
But Justice Department lawyers said in the filing in U.S.
District Court in California on Friday that they now have no choice but to hold
children for as long as it takes to resolve their immigration cases, because of
a preliminary injunction issued on Tuesday in a separate immigration case.
That case, brought by the American Civil Liberties Union in San
Diego, challenged the recent government policy of separating families in order
to detain parents for as long as necessary under President Donald Trump’s
“zero-tolerance” policy.
Since that policy was implemented in May, families have been
routinely separated after apprehension. Some 2,000 separated children are
currently under government care.
An executive order issued by Trump this month reversed the
policy, and the subsequent injunction in San Diego ordered the government to
immediately stop separating parents and children and said families must be
reunited in 30 days or less.
To comply with the injunction, the government said Friday it
“will not separate families but detain families together during the pendency of
immigration proceedings.” Cases can sometimes take months or years to resolve.
Under previous administrations, parents and children were often
released to pursue immigration claims at liberty in the United States. Trump
has decried that so-called catch-and-release policy, and vowed to detain
immigration violators.
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