There is no law to separate children from illegal alien parents; not one from 1996, not one from Clinton, not one from Obama, not one from the dems.  And not one that anyone cheered because there is no law only a policy enacted in 2018.  Your information should have been fact checked before you repeated another lie.  Fact check via Snopes next time please.
		Originally Posted by Napoleoninrags
			
		
	
 Obama had a policy, not a law, that also separated families.   this article has a liberal spin on it, as in Obama's policy didn't intentionally intend to separate families. but by taking the male parent to another location to be released back to Mexico, that's EXACTLY what happened. 
the liberal spin here makes big noise about the dire consequences of this action. well what about the actions of these illegal aliens in the first place?   
 
https://lawandcrime.com/immigration/...amilies-too-2/
Obama’s Immigration Agencies Separated Children From Their Families, Too
The Trump administration has an intentional and explicit policy of  separating migrant children from their families if caught crossing the  U.S.-Mexico border without permission. Long before that, however, the  administration of 
Barack Obama ramped up a program with a sometimes similar effect.
Since 2008, the United States has had a policy known as the Alien  Transfer Exit Program (ATEP), or Lateral Repatriation. This program  focuses on detaining male migrants of Mexican descent.
Here’s how it works: Once an immigrant is caught attempting to cross the  border without documentation, they are detained, flown or bused across  the United States and then shown the exit at another segment of the  U.S.-Mexico border–thousands of miles from their original point of  entry.
The 
Los Angeles Times described a typical use of Lateral Repatriation in a story about 
Luis Montes. 
The Times noted:
Montes was put on a plane, flown halfway across the country and bused to  the California-Mexico border. At 2 a.m. Tuesday, U.S. border  authorities took off his handcuffs and escorted him to a gate leading to  the desert city of Mexicali. Montes was back in Mexico, but about 1,200  miles away from where he started.
Luis Montes was sanguine about his dire situation, but the ATEP program  often leads to migrants being placed in completely unfamiliar  surroundings where they are then subject to crime and abuse, 
according to libertarian outlet Reason.
Sparingly used upon inception, the Obama administration drastically  increased the use of ATEP in  2011, responding to a perceived increase  in attempts at immigration into the United States by Mexican nationals.
But immigrants’ rights activists had long cautioned that Lateral  Repatriation breaks up families. The reason is fairly simple: many male  Mexican nationals who are detained trying to cross the border often come  with their families in tow. When ATEP is used, the men are captured and  taken thousands of miles away, while their wives, partners and children  are placed in immigrant detention centers.
Eventually, the men are released into vastly different parts of Mexico  than where they originally hailed from, while their families are likely  to be deported near the original point of attempted entry. Mothers and  older female relatives were typically given the option of staying with  their children. Typically this meant being housed in a “family detention  center,”most of which are located in Texas or Pennsylvania.
                                                             
                           
       
                                      
  
        
          
  
          
                         
The Trump administration has an intentional and explicit policy of  separating migrant children from their families if caught crossing the  U.S.-Mexico border without permission. Long before that, however, the  administration of 
Barack Obama ramped up a program with a sometimes similar effect.
 Since 2008, the United States has had a policy known as the Alien  Transfer Exit Program (ATEP), or Lateral Repatriation. This program  focuses on detaining male migrants of Mexican descent.
 Here’s how it works: Once an immigrant is caught attempting  to cross the border without documentation, they are detained, flown or  bused across the United States and then shown the exit at another  segment of the U.S.-Mexico border–thousands of miles from their original  point of entry.
ADVERTISING
inRead invented by Teads
 The 
Los Angeles Times described a typical use of Lateral Repatriation in a story about 
Luis Montes. 
The Times noted:
Montes was put on a plane, flown halfway across the  country and bused to the California-Mexico border. At 2 a.m. Tuesday,  U.S. border authorities took off his handcuffs and escorted him to a  gate leading to the desert city of Mexicali. Montes was back in Mexico,  but about 1,200 miles away from where he started.
Luis Montes was sanguine about his dire situation, but the ATEP  program often leads to migrants being placed in completely unfamiliar  surroundings where they are then subject to crime and abuse, 
according to libertarian outlet Reason.
 Sparingly used upon inception, the Obama administration drastically  increased the use of ATEP in  2011, responding to a perceived increase  in attempts at immigration into the United States by Mexican nationals.
 But immigrants’ rights activists had long cautioned that Lateral  Repatriation breaks up families. The reason is fairly simple: many male  Mexican nationals who are detained trying to cross the border often come  with their families in tow. When ATEP is used, the men are captured and  taken thousands of miles away, while their wives, partners and children  are placed in immigrant detention centers.
 Eventually, the men are released into vastly different parts of  Mexico than where they originally hailed from, while their families are  likely to be deported near the original point of attempted entry.  Mothers and older female relatives were typically given the option of  staying with their children. Typically this meant being housed in a  “family detention center,”most of which are located in Texas or  Pennsylvania.
 Multiple stories about those family detention centers written during the Obama era–just not by the mainstream media. 
In  particular, dozens of stories about the Nogales Placement Center in  Nogales, Arizona particular were written by journalists at Shadowproof, a reader-supported media outlet, alone. 
Journalists for Shadowproof also  frequently reported on the T. Don Hutto Residential Center in Taylor,  Texas. Most media declined to investigate these facilities until fairly  recently.
According to Angelo Guisado, a staff attorney with the Center for Constitutional Rights:
[T]hese places are tortuous: policies include banning mothers and  children from sleeping together and turning lights on/off every hour to  ensure this…guaranteeing sleep deprivation, this aside from your other  standard physical/sexual abuse in ICE custody.
                                                             
                           
       
                                      
  
        
          
  
          
                         
The Trump administration has an intentional and explicit policy of  separating migrant children from their families if caught crossing the  U.S.-Mexico border without permission. Long before that, however, the  administration of 
Barack Obama ramped up a program with a sometimes similar effect.
 Since 2008, the United States has had a policy known as the Alien  Transfer Exit Program (ATEP), or Lateral Repatriation. This program  focuses on detaining male migrants of Mexican descent.
 Here’s how it works: Once an immigrant is caught attempting  to cross the border without documentation, they are detained, flown or  bused across the United States and then shown the exit at another  segment of the U.S.-Mexico border–thousands of miles from their original  point of entry.
ADVERTISING
inRead invented by Teads
 The 
Los Angeles Times described a typical use of Lateral Repatriation in a story about 
Luis Montes. 
The Times noted:
Montes was put on a plane, flown halfway across the  country and bused to the California-Mexico border. At 2 a.m. Tuesday,  U.S. border authorities took off his handcuffs and escorted him to a  gate leading to the desert city of Mexicali. Montes was back in Mexico,  but about 1,200 miles away from where he started.
Luis Montes was sanguine about his dire situation, but the ATEP  program often leads to migrants being placed in completely unfamiliar  surroundings where they are then subject to crime and abuse, 
according to libertarian outlet Reason.
 Sparingly used upon inception, the Obama administration drastically  increased the use of ATEP in  2011, responding to a perceived increase  in attempts at immigration into the United States by Mexican nationals.
 But immigrants’ rights activists had long cautioned that Lateral  Repatriation breaks up families. The reason is fairly simple: many male  Mexican nationals who are detained trying to cross the border often come  with their families in tow. When ATEP is used, the men are captured and  taken thousands of miles away, while their wives, partners and children  are placed in immigrant detention centers.
 Eventually, the men are released into vastly different parts of  Mexico than where they originally hailed from, while their families are  likely to be deported near the original point of attempted entry.  Mothers and older female relatives were typically given the option of  staying with their children. Typically this meant being housed in a  “family detention center,”most of which are located in Texas or  Pennsylvania.
 Multiple stories about those family detention centers written during the Obama era–just not by the mainstream media. 
In  particular, dozens of stories about the Nogales Placement Center in  Nogales, Arizona particular were written by journalists at Shadowproof, a reader-supported media outlet, alone. 
Journalists for Shadowproof also  frequently reported on the T. Don Hutto Residential Center in Taylor,  Texas. Most media declined to investigate these facilities until fairly  recently.
 
According to Angelo Guisado, a staff attorney with the Center for Constitutional Rights:
[T]hese places are tortuous: policies include banning  mothers and children from sleeping together and turning lights on/off  every hour to ensure this…guaranteeing sleep deprivation, this aside  from your other standard physical/sexual abuse in ICE custody.
Single Mexican fathers or men who traveled without an adult female  companion while attempting to cross the U.S.-Mexico border with  children, when subject to ATEP, had their children separated from them.  Unaccompanied minors would then be placed into the custody of the Office  of Refugee Resettlement. Such custody is supposed to be temporary and  ORR is supposed to release children to an identified family member or  sponsor.
The Arizona-based group 
No More Deaths, along with various other human rights organizations, refers to ATEP as “a form of cruel and unusual punishment” and 
a fact sheet released by the group noted,  “Very often, families are separated and sent to cities far away from  each other. They are never told where to find their loved ones, and  humanitarian organizations often have to go through the Mexican  Consulate to get information about family members.”
Additionally, No More Deaths says the practice of Lateral Repatriation,  used by Customs and Border Protection, is largely shrouded in secrecy  and operates largely without accountability. The group notes:
The Government Accountability Office released a report in 2010  criticizing several DHS programs for lack of public accountability. The  report mentioned ATEP, in the context of other programs that do not have  any measurement mechanisms in place. DHS largely dismissed such  concerns, saying of performance measures that it “did not believe such  action was appropriate,” according to the GAO.
Because of Homeland Security’s dismissal of the need for accountability,  it’s unclear exactly how many children were separated from their  families under this Obama-era policy.
To be clear: the Obama administration’s use of ATEP was not intended  to break-up families–that was an occasionally expected side effect–while  Trump’s recently-confirmed policy is expressly directed toward that end  in the name of “deterrence.”
 [image via Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images]
 
Follow Colin Kalmbacher on Twitter: @colinkalmbacher