Feds to resume checking fingerprints of sponsors of migrant children

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SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) — The federal government has resumed checking the fingerprints of people other
than parents who step forward to care for migrant children detained at the border amid concern by
immigrant advocates that skipping the screening could put children at risk.
Kenneth Wolfe, a spokesman for the Administration for Children and Families, said late Wednesday that the
agency overseeing the shelter program for migrant children has gone back to a previous policy of only
exempting parents and legal guardians from having their fingerprints taken. He said no child was harmed
by the more lax fingerprint policy.
The number of Central American children apprehended at the border with Mexico has surged in recent weeks
and could reach 90,000 this year. To speed children through shelters and free up bed space, officials
had stopped running fingerprint checks against criminal databases for parents and other sponsors who
offered to care for them, immigrant advocates said.
Until last year, advocates said officials had checked the fingerprints of all sponsors, including
parents.
“Any time you are reducing the requirements, that is a concern,” said Kimi Jackson, director of the South
Texas Pro Bono Asylum Representation Project, which offers know-your-rights presentations to children in
detention. “There are people who will sponsor kids out in order to use them for things that are not in
their best interest.”
Immigrant advocates say rising gang violence and threats have driven the children to leave their
countries and trek across Mexico to reach the United States. Since last month, the Obama administration
has opened temporary shelters on military bases to help care for the children until they can be reunited
with a sponsor, preferably a parent or close adult relative. Most of the children are reunited with
family, according to Wolfe’s agency.
Advocates say the government faces a daunting task of balancing speed and safety when releasing the
children, many who are fleeing violent crime back home, to relatives or friends they haven’t seen in
years.
The average stay of a migrant child in a shelter is now near 35 days. It was 61 days between 2008 and
2010 in a study of 14,000 children by the Vera Institute of Justice.
For years, advocates pushed for a quicker release so children could be reunited with family. While they
don’t want the children to be unnecessarily detained, advocates now worry they aren’t getting vital
social or legal services since they are being funneled through the system so quickly.
Advocates also fear children might not confide in case workers about the dangers they face if they’ve
only known them a short time before being released.
Kimberly Haynes, director for children’s services at Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service, said the
government says it is going to have contractors follow up with children who are released to their
parents, since they are expected to remain in federal custody only about a week. But she said it’s easy
to lose track of them.
“We know of several kids who have disappeared before post follow-up services was able to be put into
place,” she said.
Wendy Young, president of Washington-based Kids in Need of Defense, said it is hard to get children legal
services when their shelter stay is so fleeting, and the rising influx means fewer are getting lawyers,
which hurts their chances of fighting deportation.

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