Trump administration has separated dozens of children from their parents for a second time, AP finds
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Add AP News as your preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Add AP News on Google Add AP News as your preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Share Eleven-year-old Ederson Galicia Alva had just stepped off the plane and into the Miami airportâs dim hallways when federal agents pulled his mother aside for questioning. Again. Panic welled up. His excitement at soon being back at recess with his Florida classmates fell away. Would the government take her away again? This was not his first trauma. In 2018, when he was just 3 years old, Ederson was taken from his motherâs arms at the U.S.-Mexico border under the first Trump administrationâs family separation policy and kept apart from her in a government facility for months. They were finally reunited after lawyers intervened. Then, in June of last year, he and his mother were separated a second time, despite legal protections meant to keep them and families like theirs together. He later joined his mother in Guatemala. After a destitute, torturous 11 months in the indigenous highlands, Edersonâs family was allowed to return to Florida last week, following a federal judgeâs order that the government had acted illegally. Now, eight years after President Donald Trumpâs forcible border separations came to an official halt following global outrage, an Associated Press investigation has found that the government has re-separated dozens of children from their families, despite a landmark legal settlement meant to reunify them. Some of their parents have been locked in immigration detention facilities for months, others deported back to their home countries after being taken from their families once again. In some cases, immigration officials conducting interior arrests deported people despite discovering they were legally off limits for removal, according to emails obtained by AP. âNot only has the government refused to acknowledge the horror of the initial separations during Trump I, but it is now detaining and deporting these same families,â said Lee Gelernt, an attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union and lead counsel in the lawsuit that ended the policy. âThese children have suffered enough without re-traumatizing them.â Read More Trump successfully ran for reelection on an anti-immigration platform. Under his second term, the administration has vowed to deport more than 1 million people per year. Federal agents have been plucking people from their communities so swiftly that, according to the Brookings Institution, now the parents of tens of thousands of children have been detained. This time, family separations often look different from Trumpâs first term. In 2018, Ederson and other children at the border were taken from their parents, who were detained separately and overwhelmingly charged criminally with illegal entry. Then, the government was unable to reunite them for months because adults and childrenâs information was kept in different computer systems. A judge barred the government from separating most families at the border and ordered the government to bring the families back together after the ACLU filed a class action lawsuit. Later, a court settlement banned most family separations to deter immigration until December 2031. Today, if parents are arrested or deported under the presidentâs push for mass deportations, they are being made to choose whether to leave their children behind in the United States. Have a news tip? Contact APâs global investigative team at [email protected]. For secure and confidential communications, use the free Signal app +1 (202) 281-8604. âDHS complies with all court orders, even as radical NGOs shop for the most favorable forum and activist judges seek to thwart our operations,â acting Assistant Secretary Lauren Bis, a Department of Homeland Security spokesperson, said in response to AP requests for comment about the governmentâs policies toward separated families. Government attorneys have argued in recent court filings that there are no legal restrictions on âthe governmentâs statutory authority to execute orders of removal.â Bis added that enforcing immigration law was ânot optional,â and that âevery removal of an illegal alien helps restore order and reinforce the rule of law.â Edersonâs family recently was allowed to return, but their status is still on shaky ground. Separated at the border, then again in Florida Ederson Galicia Alva, right, walks with his mother, Mirsy Maricela Alva LĂłpez, and sister, Briseidy, through the historic center of Guatemala City, Wednesday, May 27, 2026. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo) Ederson Galicia Alva, right, walks with his mother, Mirsy Maricela Alva LĂłpez, and sister, Briseidy, through the historic center of Guatemala City, Wednesday, May 27, 2026. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo) Add AP News on Google Add AP News as your preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More After being taken from his mother, Mirsy Maricela Alva LĂłpez, and confined to a government shelter in Arizona as a toddler for four and a half months, Ederson barely recognized her once they were reunited, she said.
