Average time unaccompanied children spend in custody is 5 hours longer than legal limit of 72 hours, reports CNN
Unaccompanied children who cross the border from Mexico are being held by US Border Patrol for 77 hours on average, five hours longer than the legal limit, according to official data seen by the US media.
Citing internal documents, CNN reported on Wednesday that unaccompanied children are coming into US custody "at levels beyond" the Health and Human Services Department's (HHS) ability to house them due to limited shelter capacity amid the coronavirus outbreak.
In the last 21 days around 340 children who crossed the border alone were taken by the Border Patrol, according to Customs and Border Protection documents.
The average time in detention facilities, which are not meant to hold children, was 77 hours – five hours longer than the legal limit of 72 hours, said the documents.
After being taken into Border Patrol custody, the unaccompanied children are turned over to the HHS.
"In Yuma, Arizona, there were more than 600 people – of all ages – in custody in a space designed for 104, according to the data," the news channel said. "And in the Rio Grande Valley, more than 2,000 people were in custody in a space for 715. The numbers can fluctuate daily."
Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas on Monday called the border situation a “stressful challenge.”
“That's why, quite frankly, we're working as hard as we are, not only in addressing the urgency of the challenge but also in building the capacity to manage it," said Mayorkas, who took the post last month.