British family decries treatment by U.S. after border crossing near Vancouver
Seven members of an extended British family who made an unauthorized crossing into the United States from British Columbia are being held in federal custody at a Pennsylvania detention centre nearly two weeks after their arrest, their lawyer said Tuesday.
U.S. border officials, meanwhile, defended their handling of the case by disclosing that two of the adults had previously been denied entry to the country.
The family said they blundered into Washington state while trying to avoid an animal on the road on the Canadian side near Vancouver and have since been “treated like criminals” by their U.S. jailers, forced to bide their time in a series of cold and unsanitary immigration facilities as they await deportation to England. The detainees include an infant and two-year-old twins.
Their attorney, Bridget Cambria, lodged a formal complaint over the family’s treatment with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s inspector general and civil rights office. She described the situation as a “very bizarre” case of federal overreach.