New York to sue Trump administration over family border separations: governor
,
By Dan Whitcomb
(Reuters)
- New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, a political opponent of U.S.
President Donald Trump, said on Tuesday that the state would sue the
Trump administration for separating children of immigrants from their
parents when apprehended illegally crossing the U.S. border.
The
separations and detention of children at the southern U.S. border with
Mexico have caused an uproar in the United States and condemnation
abroad, fueled by videos of children in cages and audiotape of children
wailing for their parents that has been broadcast on cable networks and
posted on social media.
"The
Trump Administration's policy to tear apart families is a moral failing
and a human tragedy," Cuomo, a Democrat, said in a statement announcing
the lawsuit.
Cuomo
said that separating parents and children at the border violated their
rights under the U.S. Constitution, U.S. Supreme Court precedents and a
1997 legal settlement that set standards for the treatment of children
detained for immigration reasons.
A spokesman for the Trump administration could not immediately be reached for comment on the New York lawsuit.
U.S.
officials have defended the measures as a way to secure the border and
deter illegal entry. Trump, a Republican, has made a hardline stance on
immigration a centerpiece of his presidency.
U.S.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced a "zero tolerance" policy in
April that all immigrants apprehended while crossing the U.S.-Mexico
border illegally should be criminally prosecuted under the country's
criminal entry statute.
The
policy has led to family separations because when border agents refer
apprehended migrants to court for prosecution, parents are held in
federal jail to await trial by a judge while the children either remain
in border patrol custody or are moved into facilities managed by the
Office of Refugee Resettlement, a Department of Health and Human
Services agency.
Cuomo
said he would direct several state agencies to begin legal action
against the Trump administration on behalf of some 70 children being
held in at least 10 federal shelters in New York state.

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