07.11.19

Leahy, Feinstein, Durbin: ICE Should Not Separate Families During Upcoming ICE Raids

. . . Senators Demand To Know Whether Family Separations Will Occur During Upcoming Immigration Raids

(THURSDAY, July 11, 2019) — Senate Appropriations Committee Vice Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), joined by fellow Appropriators Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) and Senator Richard Durbin (D-Ill.) – who also serve as the Ranking Member of the Judiciary Committee and Ranking Member of the Judiciary Subcommittee on Border Security and Immigration, respectively – Thursday sent an urgent letter to the Department of Homeland Security and Immigration and Customs Enforcement requesting confirmation whether family separations have been approved as part of the upcoming ICE raids. 

The Senators sent the letter on the same day The New York Times reported that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is targeting thousands of members of families for arrest and deportation beginning this weekend.  Leahy, Feinstein and Durbin strongly condemned the inhumane separation of migrant families under President Trump’s discredited “zero tolerance” policy and sent this letter to ensure that the upcoming ICE raids will not serve to resurrect a practice that they and others have widely condemned as “un-American.”

The Senators wrote:  “Even when conducting legal immigration enforcement, ICE must avoid unnecessary trauma to children and respect basic human dignity.  Family separations – except in those rare circumstances where it is necessary to protect children and legally cannot be avoided – simply should not happen.  It should not happen by design, as it did under President Trump’s previous family separation policy.  And it should not happen under the guise of necessity due to a lack of appropriate detention space or the failure to take appropriate precautionary steps for families with U.S. citizen children.  This is especially avoidable when the administration is choosing to target massive numbers of families for enforcement actions, instead of prioritizing the use of limited resources on actual threats to our communities.” 

The full text of the letter is available here and below:

CONTACT: Jay Tilton (w/Leahy) – 202-224-2667

Tom Mentzer (w/Feinstein) – 202-224-9629

Emily Hampsten (w/Durbin) – 202-228-5643

July 11, 2019

The Honorable Kevin McAleenan

Acting Secretary

United States Department of Homeland Security

Washington, DC 20528

The Honorable Matthew T. Albence

Acting Director

United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement

500 12th Street, SW

Washington, DC 20536

Dear Acting Secretary McAleenan and Acting Director Albence:

The New York Times reported this morning that Immigration and Customs Enforcement is planning to arrest thousands of members of families with final orders of removal beginning this weekend.[1]  The report states that ICE will arrest family members together “when possible,” and generally will hold them in family detention facilities in Texas and Pennsylvania.

ICE has the authority to remove individuals with final orders of removal, but ICE should focus enforcement resources on those who present public safety and national security threats.  Moreover, given the Department of Homeland Security’s track record of inhumanely separating families en masse and failing to track the families so they could be promptly reunited, we are gravely concerned that ICE may separate parents from their children as a result of these upcoming enforcement efforts. 

Even when conducting legal immigration enforcement, ICE must avoid unnecessary trauma to children and respect basic human dignity.  Family separations – except in those rare circumstances where it is necessary to protect children and legally cannot be avoided – simply should not happen.  It should not happen by design, as it did under President Trump’s previous family separation policy.  And it should not happen under the guise of necessity due to a lack of appropriate detention space or the failure to take appropriate precautionary steps for families with U.S. citizen children.  This is especially avoidable when the administration is choosing to target massive numbers of families for enforcement actions, instead of prioritizing the use of limited resources on actual threats to our communities. 

We would appreciate an immediate response, prior to the start of the upcoming enforcement actions, confirming that ICE will not separate families for any other reason than absolute legal necessity.