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ACLU: 911 children split at border since 2018 court order

By ELLIOT SPAGAT and ASTRID GALVAN

SAN DIEGO (AP) — More than 900 children, including babies and toddlers, were separated from their parents at the border in the year after a judge ordered the practice be sharply curtailed, the American Civil Liberties Union said Tuesday in a legal attack that will invite more scrutiny of the Trump administration’s widely criticized tactics.

The ACLU said the administration is separating families over dubious allegations and minor transgressions including traffic offenses. It asked a judge to rule on whether the 911 separations from June 28, 2018, to June 29 of this year were justified.

In June 2018 — days after President Donald Trump retreated amid an international uproar — U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw ordered that the practice of splitting up families at the border be halted except in limited circumstances, like threats to child safety. The judge left individual decisions to the administration’s discretion.

Since then, a parent was separated for having damaged property valued at $5, the ACLU said. A 1-year-old was separated after an official criticized her father for letting her sleep with a wet diaper.

In another case, a 2-year-old Guatemalan girl was separated from her father after authorities examined her for a fever and diaper rash and found she was malnourished and underdeveloped, the ACLU said. The father, who came from an “extraordinarily impoverished community” rife with malnutrition, was accused of neglect.

Most parents went weeks without knowing where their children were, and some weren’t even clear on why they had been separated. Roughly a third of the 900 children who have been separated from their families since the judge’s order have been in the care of Catholic Charities Community Services, which says only three children have been reunited with the parent with whom they traveled.

The organization says 185 children were released to sponsors after weeks or months in government shelters and 33 were returned to their home countries.

The separations occurred during an unprecedented surge of children from Central America that has overwhelmed U.S. authorities, most coming in families but many unaccompanied. Acting Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Mark Morgan told a Senate committee Tuesday that the agency encountered more than 300,000 children since Oct. 1.

More than 2,700 children were separated at the time of Sabraw’s 2018 ruling, which forced the government to reunify them with their parents.

The judge later ordered the government to find children who were separated since July 1, 2017, a group that an internal watchdog report estimated numbered in the thousands but has not yet been determined. The administration didn’t have adequate tracking systems at the time.

The ACLU, which based its findings on reports that the administration provided, asked Sabraw to order the government to justify separations over the last year and to clarify its criteria for doing so.

“It is shocking that the Trump administration continues to take babies from their parents,” ACLU attorney Lee Gelernt said. “The administration must not be allowed to circumvent the court order over infractions like minor traffic violations.”

The Justice Department didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

The 218-page court filing details separations that are sure to raise scrutiny of Customs and Border Protection. They include 678 separations of children whose parents faced allegations of criminal conduct. Others faced allegations of gang affiliation, child safety concerns, unverified familial relationships or parent illness.

Six parents were separated for convictions of marijuana possession. Eight were split up for fraud and forgery offenses.

The ACLU said a 4-year-old boy was split from his family because his father’s speech impediment prevented him from answering questions, despite evidence that he was the parent.

A 2-year-old girl was split from after Customs and Border Protection questioned a birth certificate’s authenticity. The father, who speaks an indigenous language and didn’t have an interpreter, was reunited after a DNA test confirmed he was a parent.

The government also took children from women whom they believed had gang ties but had been gang targets, the ACLU said.

Another Salvadoran woman was separated from her 2-year-old daughter on the toddler’s birthday because of suspected gang ties. But the woman’s attorney says her client had been raped repeatedly by a gangster who forced her to deliver marijuana inside a prison. The woman refused and turned the pot into authorities, but she was arrested anyway.

In other cases, families were separated for minor crimes that, if committed by people living in the U.S., would never result in a child being taken away.

A 7-year-old girl has been in custody since June after being separated from her father because he had a conviction of driving without a license and had previously entered the country without authorization.

The ACLU said 14 parents were separated based on immigration convictions combined with driving under the influence or unspecified traffic offenses.

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Galvan reported from Phoenix.

All-District baseball honors

Several Pekin baseball players received Class 1A all-Southeast District recognition from the Iowa High School Baseball Coaches Association.  Shortstop Tanner Bainbridge and outfielder Caleb Comstock are on the all-district first team, while Panthers pitcher Brady Latcham and catcher Quinn Ledger are on the all-district second team.  Keota utility player Colten Clarahan was also picked to the all-district second team.

Checking Class 2A, Eddyville-Blakesburg-Fremont pitcher Jared McCrea earned second team honors on the all-Southeast District team.  And in the 2A Central District, pitchers Will Dempski of Pella Christian and Derek Brown of PCM earned first team honors, along with PCM outfielder Olin Meinders.  PCM second baseman Reed Worth and utility player Sage Burns are on the all-Central District second team…..along with Pella Christian catcher Lawson Bruxvoort and first baseman Devin Haveman.

And several Ottumwa players received Class 4A all-South Central District honors.  Utility player Mitch Wood is on the all-district first team, while catcher Adam Denniston, second baseman Dominick Delahoy and utility player Jesus Jaime are on the all-district second team.

Carrie Underwood Surprises Elementary School Students During “The Champion” Rehearsal

Carrie Underwood made the day of a group of elementary school students last month, and the whole thing was caught on tape.

The Andrew Jackson Elementary School Eagle Honor Choir caught Carrie’s attention when they shared a video of them performing Carrie’s hit “The Champion.” The performance was so great, the CMA Foundation asked the kids to perform at CMA Fest last month, but before they took the stage they got a surprise visit from Carrie herself.

Video shows Carrie hiding out in the wings as the students rehearse the song, with Carrie noting, “I just love listening to them.” She eventually walks out to the surprise the kids, who were definitely excited and shocked.

The video release is in conjunction with ABC’s “CMA Fest” special, which is set to air Sunday at 8 pm.

This day in 1964: Jim Reeves dies in plane crash

This day in 1964: Country Music Hall of Fame member, Jim Reeves, died when his single-engine Beechcraft plane crashed near Nashville, Tennessee.

Reeves and his business partner and manager Dean Manuel was flying on their way to Nashville. They were riding on a single-engine aircraft, and the country singer is at the controls. The two came from Batesville, Arkansas, where they secured a deal on some real estate.

When they were flying over Brentwood, Tennessee, they were caught in a violent storm. It was an unexpected incident that caused Reeves to suffer from spatial disorientation, which is the pilot’s inability to determine his body position in space.

According to forensic evidence, Reeves relied on his instincts more than his training during the thunderstorm encounter. He turned left attempting to follow Franklin Road. This caused them to fly further into the rain. Having been too focused on establishing his ground references, Reeves let his airspeed get too low and stalled the aircraft.

Official investigation recorded that Reeves ran into the heavy rain at 4:52 p.m. and crashed only a minute later. The wreckage was found 42 hours later. The plane’s parts were buried in the ground due to the crash’s impact. Ernest Tubb and Marty Robbins were among those who joined the search operation. After their death was formally announced in public, thousands of supporters traveled to pay their last respects at the country star’s funeral.

Ottumwa man arrested in shooting

An Albia man has been arrested for allegedly shooting at a man in Ottumwa Sunday night (7/28).  Ottumwa Police tell the No Coast Network the shooting took place in an upstairs apartment in the 800 block of West Main Street.  35-year-old Chad Houk of Ottumwa told Police he was talking with 21-year-old Shain William Major of Albia inside his apartment around 10:15pm Sunday when Major produced a handgun and shot at him.  Houk was not injured.  Major was arrested around 6:30am Tuesday (7/30).  He was arrested for intimidation with a dangerous weapon, which is a Class C Felony.

Body of 1930s gangster John Dillinger to be exhumed

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — The body of notorious 1930s gangster John Dillinger is set to be exhumed from an Indianapolis cemetery more than 85 years after he was killed by FBI agents.

The Indiana State Department of Health approved a permit July 3 for Dillinger’s nephew, Michael C. Thompson, to have the body exhumed from Crown Hill Cemetery and reinterred there.

The permit doesn’t indicate the reason for that request.

Health department spokeswoman Jeni O’Malley says the agency expects Dillinger’s body will be exhumed and reinterred Sept. 16, based on the permit.

Crown Hill Cemetery spokeswoman Crystal King says the cemetery has no information about those plans.

Statesmen football picked second

Good things are predicted for William Penn University’s football team.  According to the preseason poll of the Heart of America Athletic Conference coaches, the Statesmen are picked to finish second in the North Division.  Grand View is the coaches’ favorite in the North Division with Benedictine the favorite in the South Division.  The Statesmen kick off their 2019 football season August 31 against Evangel at Statesmen Community Stadium.

Ottumwa man dies in weekend crash

An Ottumwa man was killed over the weekend in a one car crash in Van Buren County.  The Iowa State Patrol says 55-year-old Michael Dewayne Lawson was going north on County Road V56 around 11:30 Friday night (7/26) when he ran the stop sign at County Road J40, went into the north ditch on J40 and hit the embankment.  Lawson was pronounced dead at the scene.

McNeal takes plea deal

One of three people awaiting trial for a shootout with Ottumwa Police last August has made a plea deal.  36-year-old Tiffany McNeal pleaded guilty in Wapello County Court Monday (7/29) to one count of second degree burglary and two counts of willful injury causing bodily injury.  She had been charged with attempted murder.  McNeal was one of four people involved in a robbery gone bad on August 3 of last year.  She admits to helping Dalton Cook, Roy White and Michael Bibby rob a house on Lillian Street. White was killed in an ensuing shootout with police.  Cook and Bibby will go on trial in January for attempted murder and other charges.

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