The ACLU is taking the Obama administration to court for locking up immigrant mothers and children — many of whom they say are fleeing conditions of extreme violence in their home countries — and holding the families in detention centers while they await their asylum hearings.
In a class-action lawsuit filed Tuesday, the civil liberties advocacy organization charged that the policy of detaining immigrant families violates not only federal immigration laws, but also the Fifth Amendment for locking up asylum-seekers for the explicit purpose of deterring others from attempting to seek refuge in the United States.
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“Locking up families and depriving them of their liberty in order to scare others from seeking refuge in the U.S. is inhumane and illegal,” Judy Rabinovitz, deputy director of the ACLU’s Immigrants’ Rights Project, said in a statement. “The government should not be using these mothers and their children as pawns. They have already been through devastating experiences, and imprisoning them for weeks or months while they await their asylum hearings is unnecessary and traumatizing.”
The federal government has rushed to beef up resources along the southwestern border since last summer when thousands of unaccompanied minors who were caught trying to enter the U.S. illegally generating widespread media coverage and outrage. Much to the ire of human rights and refugee advocates, that has lead to one major change to the Obama administration’s detention policy: locking up immigrants who could potentially qualify for asylum in the U.S..
Advocates and organizations have found that many of the children swept up along the southwestern border said they were fleeing dire conditions in Central America. Ordinarily, those children would automatically qualify to have their cases brought before an immigration judge who would determine whether the threats the young migrants faced in their home countries were credible. In the past, those children would be allowed to live with family members in the United States as they awaited their court dates. But instead of being released, more and more young migrants are being detained with their mothers in family facilities near the border.









