Posted on 07/31/2018 4:23:40 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
A top health official told lawmakers Tuesday that the Trump administration was warned about instituting any policy resulting in family separations because of the effects such separations could have on the wellbeing of immigrant children.
The officials response came after Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) asked every federal immigration official at Tuesdays hearing over family separations to answer a particular question: Did anyone on this panel say, maybe [separating families] wasnt such a good idea?
After a pause, Blumenthal directed his question first to Commander Jonathan White of the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, who said he and the Office of Refugee Resettlement raised a number of concerns in the previous year about any policy which would result in family separation due to concerns we had about the best interest of the child as well about whether that would be operationally supportable with the bed capacity we had.
The Democratic senator asked the commander to further explain his response in laymans terms, asking if he told the administration that children would suffer as a result of its zero tolerance policy.
Separation of children from their parents entails significant harm to children, White said in response. Theres no question that separation of children from parents entails significant potential for traumatic psychological injury to the child, he added, shortly after.
White also said that the administrations response was that family separation was not a policy. As stated before, there is no current law that mandates the separation of migrant children from their parents at the U.S. border.
The Trump administration implemented its zero-tolerance policy this spring. President Donald Trump signed an executive order in June to halt the separations.
In recent weeks, lawsuits filed against the separation policy have produced testimonies from lawyers and the separated families they represent, alleging that the governments actions resulted in trauma to their children.
In one personal declaration presented earlier this month in court, one mother said her son is not the same since we were reunited.
I thought that, because he is so young he would not be traumatized by this experience, but he does not separate from me. He cries when he does not see me, Olivia Caceres said of her 1-year-old son. That behavior is not normal. In El Salvador he would stay with his dad or my sister and not cry. Now he cries for fear of being alone, she wrote.
Here are several other key moments from Tuesdays hearing in front of the Senate Judiciary Committee.
1. Committee Chairman Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, said the Trump administration mishandled family separations. The senator pressed the officials over reports of sexual abuse and other violations against migrants at the governments detention facilities. It should be noted that Grassley and the panels top Democrat, Dianne Feinstein of California, sent a letter this week asking federal investigators to look into the alleged mistreatment and abusive practices against migrants in U.S. custody. These allegations of abuse are extremely disturbing and must be addressed, Grassley and Feinstein wrote in a bipartisan letter. This is not a partisan issue as reporting suggests many have been occurring for years. Immigrant families and children kept in federal custody deserve to be treated with basic human dignity and respect and should never be subjected to these forms of abuse, they wrote.
2. Sen. Richard Durbin (D-Ill.) called for Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsens resignation. In the hearing, the senator said it was under her watch that thousands of children were separated from their parents, while hundreds remain separated from their families. He called the administrations zero tolerance policy cruel. Someone, someone in this administration has to accept responsibility. We can have border security without bullying. We can be safe without treating toddlers like terrorists, he added.
3. Matthew Albence of ICE described family detention centers as summer camp. In response to cited reports of abuse in the governments family detention centers, Albence said any allegation is automatically reported to a joint intake center and added that the office of inspector general has the power to investigate these allegations if it thinks theres sufficient evidence to do so. He then said the best way to describe the centers would be to liken them to summer camp. He cited 24/7 food, water, and education, among other services. He also mentioned basketball courts, exercise classes, and soccer fields. Im very comfortable with the level of service and protection that is being provided in these centers, Albence said.
(VIDEO-AT-LINK)
4. Was the zero tolerance policy a success? Another Blumenthal moment: The senator asked if anyone in the room thought the administrations zero tolerance policy had been a success. You can just raise your hand, if you think its been a success, the senator said. No one raised their hand.
5. Who defended the immigration officials? Among the senators who defended the officials during the hearing was Republican Sen. John Cornyn of Texas who blamed Congress for the administrations inability to fix family separations, adding that those offering criticism also provide no plausible or workable solution at all.
No more asylum nonsense. If you want asylum apply at your country's US embassy.
This will solve the separation problem.
Put It on billboards in Mexico. We already know how bad it is.
This should be an additional crime for the criminal parents.
Care zero feks.
But taking your kid on the run and crossing a border illegally risking their lives the whole way plus risking being separated by the authorities, thats not a problem.”””
Exactly. Every single one of these illegal invaders can KMA. I have lost all sympathy for them.
Play stupid games——Win stupid prizes.
Logically, if this is a bad thing....then when you get arrested for regular bank robbery or murdering someone....your wife and kids ought to come with you to prison so that the family stays intact. And they shouldn’t have any choice about the matter....the family unit must always stay together, even when mom or dad screws up big-time.
How about separating parents from their children when they are sentenced to jail for murder, child abuse and sexual abuse, robbery, drug smuggling, etc?
The Dems would have to send the kids to stay in the jails with their parents, or, in the alternative, commute their sentences so that they could be with their kids.
If that makes any sense, let me know.
What are the percentages of children separated from their biological parents before they illegally cross? And what is the motive of the non-biological adult they are crossing? Are the children being screened for rape and molestation? Are.the dems even concerned?
I imagine the kids are better able to handle some adversity than those suffering Trump derangement Syndrome - they may be kids but they ain’t snowflakes...
Senator Stolen Valor is a Dick!
Why didn’t he ask Barry and his minions these asinine questions?
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