Los Angeles Times
By Cindy Carcamo
August 14, 2014
An
11-year-old boy — one of hundreds who have been shuttled to an
immigration detention facility in the middle of the New Mexican desert —
was released this week after
it was discovered that he is a U.S. citizen, according to the child's
attorney.
The
boy spent more than a month at the detention center in Artesia, N.M.,
before an immigration attorney who happened to be visiting the facility
discovered his status
last week. The child, whose father is a U.S. citizen, had migrated from
Central America with his mother before both were detained.
"I don't think they asked him the right questions," said the boy's attorney, Stephen Manning. "He should never have been there."
Leticia
Zamarripa, a spokeswoman with Department of Homeland Security,
described the case as "a complex matter" but said she could not comment
on individual immigration
cases because of privacy issues.
She
did say that if an immigration detainee claims U.S. citizenship, the
person could be released from custody while Immigration and Customs
Enforcement officials investigate.
Ultimately, an immigration judge decides whether a person is eligible
to remain in the United States.
The
case highlights the difficulties and potential pitfalls federal
officials have faced in speeding up the processing of the thousands of
single parents with children
who have fled Central America and entered the U.S. through its southern
border, said Laura Lichter, an immigration attorney.
Lichter
is part of a contingent of lawyers that has been given access to the
Artesia facility to provide free legal counsel to the detainees.
"I
think the fact that a U.S. citizen was detained and for this long
before anyone actually realized that there was even the possibility that
they had detained a U.S.
citizen shows you just how little respect and attention is being given
to people's cases," said Lichter, former president of American
Immigration Lawyers Assn. "What this shows you is that there really is
no due process here and that the system is only working
in a way to deport people from the country. It is not working to
protect people's claims."
The
boy's case also reflects what happens when U.S. immigration law
collides with the reality of modern, blended families, in which some
members may be in the country
legally while others are not.
Manning
said that according to immigration law, because the boy's father is a
U.S. citizen, his child is too, even though the boy was born abroad.
Once
federal authorities were alerted to the boy's status, Manning said,
they acted immediately to release him. His mother also was released,
though it's unclear whether
she is eligible for legal relief, Manning said.
Manning
was hesitant to release any identifying information on the child — such
as the country he had originated from or where he was heading within
the U.S. He did say,
however, that the boy and his mother were on their way to be reunited
with family and that the father lives in the U.S.
In
the last nine months, nearly 63,000 single parents with at least one
child have been apprehended along the Southwest border, mainly in
southern Texas. At the same time,
about the same number of unaccompanied children have been apprehended
along the border.
Most
of the migrants are from Central America — mainly Honduras, Guatemala
and El Salvador. Although some have tried to enter the U.S. illegally,
many have given themselves
up to Border Patrol officers upon entering the United States. A
combination of factors —including escalating gang violence, crushing
poverty and rumors about potential immigration relief — has led a surge
of people heading north.
The
exodus from Central America has overwhelmed Homeland Security
officials, who have vowed to speed up immigration hearings but have also
struggled to house immigrant
families and unaccompanied children.
Immigrant
rights groups and immigration attorneys have countered that quick
removals would violate many migrants' rights of due process. There have
also been reports of
abuses and inadequate access to attorneys, healthcare and food at new
detention facilities, specifically in Artesia.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
No comments:
Post a Comment