The U.S. government is asking a federal court to reconsider allowing it to continue detaining immigrant women and children caught along the southwestern border after the government was ordered to immediately release the families seeking refuge in the U.S.
A district court judge in California issued a scathing order last month condemning the Obama administration for violating a decades-old agreement that outlined standards for keeping children in federal custody. Judge Dolly Gee found it both “astonishing” and “shocking” that officials would spend millions of dollars to build new facilities from the ground up without first ensuring the detention centers comply with those standards.
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Lawyers from the Department of Justice formally responded late Thursday, arguing that the policies under contention were already outdated by the time the court reached its decision. If the judge’s order was upheld, and the families were released, there would be grave repercussions, they argued.
“The proposed remedies could heighten the risk of another surge in illegal migration across our Southwest border by Central American families, including by incentivizing adults to bring children with them on their dangerous journey as a means to avoid detention and gain access to the interior of the United States,” the Justice Department attorneys wrote.
The federal government had rushed to build two new immigrant detention centers in south Texas that were designed to accommodate children, equipped with playgrounds and classrooms, in the wake of a humanitarian crisis at the border. More than 60,000 unaccompanied minor children were captured after fleeing from Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador in the last fiscal year, over-taxing virtually every level of the government’s response and fueling a heated political debate over immigration reform.
Administration officials said at the time that once the children completed the legal process, the vast majority of them would ultimately be sent back home. But just the opposite was happening. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services found that nearly 90% of women and children held in immigrant detention centers expressed a credible fear of returning to their home countries — and so they could continue the process of seeking asylum.
Advocacy groups condemned the government’s response on Friday, arguing that family detention is a flawed policy that was hastily implemented. The number of families caught entering the U.S. has dropped in the last year, down more than 50%. With the flow of migration down, the groups say they want to see the practice of family detention abandoned entirely.
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