Images of shelters filled with undocumented boys are raising questions about where young girls are being placed as a part of the Trump’s administration zero-tolerance policy.

Officials from the Department of Homeland Security and Health and Human Services said on Tuesday morning on a call with reporters that they are working on getting “government resources” to get the images released to the public.

Officials said that many of the children who are held by the Department of Homeland Security are transferred after 72 hours to Health and Human Services.

More than 2,300 children have been separated from parents from May 5 to June 9, according to statistics provided by officials. The permanent shelters, officials said, are giving children educational, hygiene, medical and counseling resources.

It is unclear, though, which shelters are designated for girls after detention processing and how many children have been reunited under the new policy. The media has not been allowed to take their own photographs of the shelters where young girls are being kept.

Outraged over the Trump administration's policy of splitting up families entering the country illegally, protesters marched Sunday to a shelter in Tornillo, Texas, where children are being held outside this tiny farming community south of El Paso. (Alfredo Corchado / The Dallas Morning News)

Officials said they are working on gathering images and video of young girls and toddlers at the shelters in the next few days.

The Trump administration announced a zero-tolerance policy of criminally prosecuting every immigrant, including asylum seekers, who illegally crosses the U.S.-Mexico border in early April.

A consequence of blanket prosecution is that children are separated from their parents, who are taken into federal custody. The policy has sparked widespread bipartisan furor, finger-pointing and even warring Bible references.

Homeland Security officials said they hope the new policy is a deterrent to parents who are bringing their children on the journey to the border of the United States.

Steve Wagner, an official with Human and Health Services, said the agencies are in the process of getting families back together.

“This policy is relatively new. We are still working on the experience of reunification after adjuscation,” Wagner said.