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News / Northwest

Attorneys say there’s no access to asylum seekers in Oregon prison

By GILLIAN FLACCUS, Associated Press
Published: June 19, 2018, 9:18pm

PORTLAND — Immigration attorneys in Oregon said Tuesday they haven’t been able to meet with more than 120 asylum seekers being held at a federal prison southwest of Portland as protests against the Trump administration’s policy of separating families crossing the border illegally flared for a second day.

There are 123 men being held at the prison in Sheridan, at least six of whom have been separated from their children, attorneys from the American Civil Liberties Union and Innovation Law Lab said during a telephone briefing with reporters.

The men are from 16 countries including Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Peru and Nicaragua, according to information provided by Oregon Sen. Jeff Merkley’s office.

An attorney who was able to enter the facility with a delegation from the Mexican consulate did speak briefly with two Mexican men who said they were separated from their children.

Carissa Cutrell, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Office of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, said generally immigrants apprehended crossing the border illegally are being housed in federal prisons because capacity at immigration detention centers was exhausted by the Trump administration’s zero-tolerance policy.

Because the asylum seekers are in a prison, the Bureau of Prisons regulations apply for visits but “ICE is currently … working to ensure that detainees have appropriate access to their legal representatives.”

She could not immediately comment on the specific situation at the Sheridan facility.

President Donald Trump’s immigration policies have drawn intense scrutiny following the forced separation of migrant children from their parents. Democrats and some Republicans are urging an end to the practice at the U.S.-Mexico border. Children split from their families at that border are being held in government-run facilities.

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