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The Latest: LA Judge OKs Monitor To Probe Border Facilities

SAN DIEGO (AP) — The Latest on the reunification of families separated at the border (all times local):

12:30 p.m.

A federal judge in Los Angeles will appoint an independent monitor to evaluate conditions for immigrant children in U.S border facilities.

The decision comes after a spate of reports in Texas of spoiled food, insufficient water and frigid conditions by the youngsters and their parents.

Judge Dolly M. Gee on Friday said she reached her decision after seeing a "disconnect" between government monitors' assessment of conditions in facilities in the Rio Grande Valley and the accounts of more than 200 immigrant children and their parents detailing numerous problems.

The government opposed the monitor.

Both sides have until Aug. 10 to agree on a proposed monitor. If they can't, each will make suggestions to the judge and she will choose her own.

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12:10 p.m.

A federal judge in Seattle says the Trump administration must share certain information about migrant families who were separated at the Mexico border with a group of states suing over the president's immigration policies.

U.S. District Judge Marsha Pechman said Friday she wants the Justice Department to give the 17 states, led by Washington, the same information it has turned over to plaintiffs in a related class-action case in San Diego. The states hope to use the information to help locate any separated children within their borders, so as to assist them as needed.

The federal government has been working to reunite the families under orders from the judge in San Diego. Several hundred children have yet to be reunited, in some cases because their parents have been deported without them.

The Justice Department is seeking to have the Seattle case dismissed or transferred to San Diego, saying it would be more efficient.

The 17 states are led by Democratic attorneys general. They include Massachusetts, California, Delaware, Iowa, Illinois, Maryland, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia and Washington, plus Washington, D.C.

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11:20 a.m.

The Texas Civil Rights Project says it is trying to find out on its own what happened to about 200 people who were separated from their children, one day after the government's deadline to reunite families.

Efren Olivares, a lawyer for the project, said Friday that he's confirmed 76 of the 382 families the group has worked with have been reunited.

Others have been reunited in family detention. According to Olivares, fathers and children are going to one family detention facility in South Texas and mothers and children are going to another.

But there's no information about many others, leaving the group to work with other advocates and consular officials from Central America. Olivares says the group has considered hiring private investigators.

He says: "We are being as creative as we can."

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8:30 a.m.

Trump administration officials say they have reunified all parents with their children that they deemed eligible of those who are in immigration custody.

Homeland Security officials said in a statement that officials would continue to work to reunite families who were not able to be reunified.

As of Thursday officials said more than 1,800 children 5 years and older had been reunified with parents or sponsors.

Updated figures were expected to be provided Friday during a hearing before the federal judge in San Diego overseeing the reunifications.

The judge must now decide how to address the hundreds of still-separated children whose parents were deported and how much time, if any, reunified parents should be allowed to file asylum claims.

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12:11 a.m.

The Trump administration says more than 1,800 children 5 years and older had been reunited with parents or sponsors hours before the deadline. That includes 1,442 children who were returned to parents in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody, and another 378 who were released under a variety of other circumstances.

But officials say about 700 more remain separated, including 431 whose parents were deported. Those reunions take more time, effort and paperwork as children are returned to Central America.

With the court-ordered deadline passed, the federal judge in San Diego who ordered the reunifications must now decide how to address the hundreds of still-separated children whose parents were deported, as well as how much time, if any, reunified parents should be allowed to file asylum claims.