The Daily - Trump Said Family Separations Would End. They’re Happening Again.
Episode Date: August 7, 2025During President Trump’s first term, the intentional separation of migrant child from their parents shocked the country and persuaded Mr. Trump to say he would end the practice for good.Hamed Aleazi...z, who covers immigration policy for The Times, has found that in Mr. Trump’s second term, the practice has returned.Guest: Hamed Aleaziz, who covers the Department of Homeland Security and immigration policy in the United States for The New York Times.Background reading: Inside President Trump’s new tactic to separate immigrant families.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday. Photo: Victor J. Blue for The New York Times Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
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From the New York Times, I'm Michael Bobarro.
This is the Daily.
During President Trump's first term,
the intentional separation of migrant children from their parents
shocked the country and persuaded Trump to say that he would end the practice for good.
But my colleague, Hamid Ali Aziz,
has found that in Trump's second term,
family separations are back.
It's Thursday, August 7th.
Hi, this is the New York Times.
Yes, yes.
I'm here with the subject you requested, sir.
Okay, fantastic.
Let me get my translator on the call.
Hamid, I wonder if you can tell us about this family that you have been talking to.
Yeah, I've been speaking with this Russian couple,
Evgenia and Evgeny, for the past month.
Okay, are you here?
Is everybody here?
Yeah.
Hello?
Okay, wonderful.
They're in their 30s.
They're from the Russian city of,
Vogelgrad, and they have this eight-year-old child, Maxime.
I guess I'd like to start, you know, why come, why did you want to come to America?
In Afghanistan, in Afghanistan, walked me through their family's journey.
They fled Russia because of their political activists.
They were supporters of Alexei Navalny.
We were on their watch list, and that made it impossible to stay in our country.
And they went to Mexico.
There was a program in place, which was called CBP1,
and we were waiting for about 10 months while in Mexico.
And their desire was to get an appointment through this app that the Biden administration had created,
which allowed people to,
come to port of entry, enter the United States, and seek asylum within the country.
Right. And I'm guessing based on what you said, that they were seeking political asylum based on this adversarial relationship they had with the Putin government.
Definitely. They say they were fleeing for their lives. But while they're waiting, President Trump is elected and he closes down CBP1.
Mm-hmm.
And on January 20th, it's gone.
So what happens to them with this app gone?
So they realize that there's no way to enter the United States
in the way that they had imagined.
So they get inside of a car with two other Russian families
and they go to a port of entry.
We immediately informed that all of the people,
who were in the car are seeking to apply for the political asylum.
And says they're there to seek asylum,
but because the Trump administration has shut down asylum
at the southern border wholly and completely,
those options are not available to them,
and they are detained in Border Patrol custody.
So every attempt,
that they've made to enter the country legally has failed,
and now they are in the U.S., in the eyes of the Trump administration, illegally.
Yeah, their order deported very quickly,
and the government wants to enforce this deportation order
and get them out of the country.
Got it.
So what happens once that deportation order is issued?
Evgenia says that in mid-May,
after they had already spent two weeks in Border Patrol custody,
they were taken from Border Patrol detention to JFK Airport.
And then the following day, they were trying to deport us.
And it's there where Evgenia and Evgeny realize that they are being deported to Russia,
which is something that in their eyes is just in place.
It's something that cannot happen because of the fear and the threats that they face back in Russia.
So you have this situation where in Afghanistan's eyes, where she's in JFK Airport, she's nervous, she's fearful of what deportation means back to her home country, and she sees her husband plating with the ICE officials to stop their deportation.
we very reasonably explained our position
and explained that we're not going to fly anywhere.
Right, potentially it's life or death for them.
Exactly, yeah, it is life or death for them.
And it's at this point inside the airport
where they are first told of this idea
that since they're refusing their deportation,
they will be separated from their eight-year-old.
boy, Maxime, who will go into government custody.
Just explain that.
What exactly are they being told and what rationale is being given?
Yeah, so they're taken to a room inside JFK, and it's there where
Evgenia believes that since they've refused this deportation, they're going to be
separated from their child for a day or two.
but you have these really intense scenes.
Well, at first I was actually holding up pretty well,
but then I started to cry.
And when I started to cry, he picked up and he started to cry too.
Maxime was looking at his parents.
He's confirming with them that it will only take a few days.
At one point, Evgenia says that her last image of her son,
is her crying and being told to leave this room
and her looking back at her son
and seeing that he was also crying
but he had kind of faced his head in a different direction
and that was the lasting image that she still has
in her mind of the last time that she saw her son
and from there, Maxime is taken to HHS custody
where he's taken to a child's shelter
and the parents are taken to ICE detention.
Well, what happened to what they understood to be
a very short-term separation?
It wasn't short-term.
It continues. The separation continues.
And in the days and weeks after their initial separation,
and Evgenia is talking to Maxime on the phone.
He said that he's sleeping in the same room with children
who don't speak English and they don't speak Russian
and he doesn't understand them at all.
He's in a shelter for an accompanied immigrant children
and she recalls how it was difficult to actually have this conversation
with their son, because he was crying so much.
He was just relentlessly crying.
Maxime is asking his mother,
when are you getting me out of here?
You know, when are you going to come get me?
Mm-hmm.
He said, Mama, when are you going to take me out of here?
And his mother says,
we're working on it, we'll make it happen.
I was trying to explain to him that we're trying.
We're trying to do that.
We're talking to the officers.
We're trying to convince them.
But of course, she knows she has no understanding whether that's realistic.
Well, what is she being told?
What are the border immigration officials telling her and her husband about her son
and whether they're going to be reunited?
Nothing.
They have no sense of whether or not they'll be reunified with their child.
Their attorney actually had requested from the Trump administration
to detain the family together in an ICE detention center in Texas,
but that request was not granted.
So, Hamid, what exactly do you come to understand has happened to this family
and why they end up in this pretty tortured,
state of limbo and quite obviously separation.
These parents are no longer with their quite young son.
Well, what I came to understand through weeks of investigation
coming through case files and internal documents
was that this family was the face of family separation
in this new form during the second Trump.
We'll be right back.
We'll be right back.
Ahmed, you called this a new form of family separation, and of course, the initial form of family
family separation ended up being a defining chapter of the first Trump administration.
But what's different about these family separations from the family separations of the first
Trump administration and what's similar?
I guess we may need to go back to the first version of it.
Yeah, if you can recall, back during the first Trump administration in 2018, the Department
of Justice, working with the Department of Homeland Security.
Enacts this policy where anybody crossing the border illegally was going to be charged with a legal entry.
And that included families as well.
And as a result of that prosecution, thousands of families were separated.
And the whole idea behind these family separations, you know, taking the children from the families, was to deter families from
trying to cross into the country illegally.
This was something that the Trump administration
had struggled with,
that families were crossing the border illegally
and then ultimately being released into the country
and they saw it as this poll factor,
this idea that families knew
that if they crossed into the United States,
they had a free ticket into the country,
and this was their solution to stop that.
Right.
But the outcry from,
the public once the times broke the story
that these separations were happening was extraordinary.
Yeah, definitely.
Bring the children now!
Free the children now!
There were protests.
Tens of thousands marched across the country over immigration.
The Pope called it immoral.
You had this audio of a young girl
crying for her parents.
that went viral.
All of these different scenes that really cut through
in a way with the American public turning against this policy.
We all should be able to agree
that in the United States of America,
we will not intentionally separate children
from their parents.
We will not do that.
We are better than that.
better than that. And ultimately, it went to court. The ACLU was able to get a judge to
block these separations outside of very specific scenarios. And President Trump ultimately says,
okay, we won't do this anymore around the same time in the summer of 2018. Right. It was one of the
few policies that he genuinely reversed himself on. As I recall, he signs an executive order and very
publicly says, I am not going to do this. People are saying, this is terrible, I hear you.
So why would the second Trump administration bring any version of this back? Well, the Trump
administration has said that there is no family separation policy, that they do not separate
families, that there's nothing new happening here. But I've been looking through documents and
interviewing families like
Afghani and Afghanistan. And what
I found is that there have been
at least nine families in
similar situations.
Families that have refused
to be deported to
their home countries for
reasons, obviously, like
Afghanistan and
Afghani. And when they've refused,
when they've decided not to get
on these planes to be deported,
it's at that point that the government
is separating
these families.
And why can't the U.S.
just force these families
to get on these planes
and leave if there is a deportation
order? There are certain countries that
ICE has had
difficulty to deport to
regularly, and
one of those countries is
Russia. Obviously, there are
not the greatest of relations
between Russia and the United States.
And as a result,
ICE has to deport
Russians primarily through commercial airports and put them on planes. And as opposed to a charter
flight that ICE is administering where they can shackle them and arrest them and handcuff them
and put them on the plane, the situation on airplanes is different. And if people refuse to
board or make a scene, the airlines will not take them. And so ultimately what the Trump
administration is trying to do here is to separate them for their refusal and continue to try to
deport them. And in their eyes, they believe that it's a different policy, that it's actually
happening not at the southern border, but inside the United States. Well, why does that
distinction matter, where the separation is occurring? And I guess that makes me wonder,
how does it relate to the court rulings about that initial form of separation?
Yeah, the court order in 2018 applied to separations specifically at the southern border.
Again, these families that are crossing and as a result are being separated due to these
prosecutions. And so the court order blocks these separations of the southern border outside
of a few different scenarios.
You know, somebody's a national security threat, a public safety threat, or a danger to
their children.
In those circumstances, there can be separations, but otherwise there cannot be.
But internally, inside ICE, they view these separations as a different form of separation.
We found a case file, in fact, in one of these cases where they say there is no court
ramifications or implications here, and that it's a different form of separation. It's a
interior separation. Hmm. So because the location of the separation in the country's
interior, not at the border, is defining this new kind of family separation. The administration
is saying that it's within the bounds of the law. Exactly. That is the way they discuss it
internally. Okay. So they do acknowledge these separations are happening?
well it is a strange kind of roundabout way of confirming it they say they do not do family separation
but then they say that due to the family's behaviors and refusing to comply with this deportation
order hHS took custody of the children which of course is a form of the family being separated
since the child is going from the parents to HHS custody.
And, of course, in the internal records,
there's the documentation of these separations.
Ultimately, this separation really serves as an accelerant
for these families to decide to leave the country
because, you know, you can imagine when given the obvious choice
of being separated from their child
or leaving together as a unit.
It's a very compelling argument to give in and to leave the country.
What this would seem to suggest is that the impulse to separate migrant families
has never really gone away inside the Trump administration.
And yet this second version that you have found in your reporting
only applied so far to nine families.
And I wonder what you make of that.
I mean, that is significantly, significantly smaller
than the thousands of families
that went through family separation
in the first term at the border.
Yeah, I have found evidence of this happening to nine families.
Of course, there could be more.
I mean, it's important to know that I don't have
the number of families that were faced with this choice and ultimately decided to leave
the United States. Right, because you're focused on the families that have decided to stay.
Yeah, I mean, I think right now, ICE is under incredible pressure to boost their deportation numbers.
They've gone through firings of leadership. They've been told to arrest 3,000 people a day.
The pressure has been relentless.
And in these situations, they are not going to allow families that simply refuse to get on deportation flights
to have the ability to be released into the country and to live their lives and go through court proceedings.
That is not an option that's going to be afforded to them simply because they refuse to be deported.
Ultimately, they will continue to try to deport them,
and as a result of their refusal, they will be separated.
I think that brings us back to the family that you spent so much time talking to from Russia.
They have not given in to this pressure to leave.
And so what does that say about the power of this as a deterrent?
And what awaits this family if they remain separated?
I think it just speaks to how scared they were to be removed to Russia,
that, you know, like they've said repeatedly,
this was just not a possibility that they could even imagine happening to them.
They were not going to allow it.
And they've experienced this separation now for more than two months.
Wow.
And they have not given in.
They have not said, we will be deported.
And ultimately, they have continued to claim fear of Russia.
And as a result, finally, they were given a screening, you know, trying to determine whether or not their fear level passed the government's threshold of being a legitimate fear level, of being harmed in their home country.
And they passed that very high bar that was given to them.
They pass that, and now the government cannot deport this family to Russia.
Which would suggest that their original claims that they deserve political asylum in the U.S.
contain some level of credibility.
Yeah, but, you know, at this point, the Trump administration has blocked the avenues for asylum.
So all that's remaining for them is this tiny sliver of a chance that they can avoid.
deportation to Russia, but at the end of the day, it does not mean that they will potentially
stay in the United States, and it could result in them ultimately being removed to a third
country.
In the meantime, what has happened to Maxime, to this eight-year-old boy?
Well, he has since been transferred to foster care, and he's able to regularly speak to
his parents on the phone.
And during these conversations, his father,
Evgeny told me that he tries to keep his son's mind
off of this grueling separation.
I was asking about friends.
I was asking what interesting things he'd seen or experienced.
And he asks some questions, you know, like, what are
some of his favorite things to eat, what has he done?
And one of the questions that he's asked him is,
what are your favorite things to do?
What are your favorite things to do, you know, in America?
What are you doing?
And his son responded,
well, my favorite thing to do is to speak with you
and, you know, my mother.
And his father said, okay, what's your second favorite thing
And he says, my second favorite thing to do is to speak with you alone.
And his father says, what's your third favorite thing to do?
And he says, my third favorite thing to do is to speak with my mother alone.
So you can see, obviously, through this answer, how focused he is on his parents.
And...
And, he's recently grown despondent, according to his mother, who said that, you know,
he had been consistently counting the days that they had been separated from one another since May.
And he actually stopped doing this because he feels apathetic at this point, I think.
And recently he stopped counting
and he told his mother on the phone
that, you know, what was the point of counting
the days they'd been separated?
There didn't seem to be any prospect of them being together again.
I mean, he sounds like an eight-year-old boy
who desperately needs a hug from his mom and his dad.
Definitely.
And his father has been,
And thinking about the fact that his son is going to turn nine on August 24th.
And on that day, that will be the worst birthday in his life.
He's going to experience this birthday separate from his mother and father.
And I hope that it will not repeat ever again in his life.
His father said that he hopes that this is the only time.
that he has a birthday away from his parents.
Mohammed, thank you very much. We appreciate it.
Thank you for having me.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to another day.
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After announcing 25% tariffs on Indian imports last week,
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at a time when the United States is trying to force Russia to end its war in Ukraine.
Meanwhile, President Trump said he would meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin
as soon as next week for what would be the first in-person summit
between the leaders of both countries since Russia invaded Ukraine three years ago.
The meeting reflects Trump's belief that a peace deal between Russia and Ukraine
can only be achieved through his personal personal.
persuasion.
Today's episode was produced by Carlos Prieto, Claire Tenesketter, and Shannon Lynn.
It was edited by Rachel Quester and Devin Taylor.
Contains original music by Alicia Baitoum, Dan Powell, Pat McCusker, and Rowan
Nimisto, and was engineered by Alyssa Moxley.
Our theme music is by Jim Runberg and Ben Lansford of Wonderland.
That's it for the daily. I'm Michael Barbaro. See you tomorrow.