The Obama administration’s legal footing for its immigrant detention policy has started to slip, leaving the U.S. government with limited options as it seeks to prevent another humanitarian crisis along its southern border.
Courts have been chipping away at the policy since the U.S. first starting detaining families last June — a federal judge in California has ordered all detained children and parents released, while another judge in Washington, D.C., has said the U.S. may not detain asylum-seekers for the sole purpose of deterring migration.
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The latest blow comes out of Pennsylvania, where the Department of Health Services announced Thursday that it will not renew the license for an immigrant family detention center there once it expires in February. Without licensing and oversight, the federal government would be violating a long-standing legal settlement that outlines clear standards for facilities that hold children in federal custody.
According to the ruling of one judge, however, the federal government is already violating that settlement. California District Judge Dolly Gee issued the scathing opinion in July, faulting the administration for failing to ensure basic standards for childcare, even as the government was building two brand-new detention centers from the ground up.
Gee later rejected the administration’s request to reconsider and gave officials until Friday to comply with her decision.
But despite Gee’s order for the prompt release of the immigrant mothers and children in custody, administration officials have defied the ruling by continuing to detain families caught entering the U.S. illegally.
Department of Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson has said that he and the department “disagree with portions of the legal reasoning in the decision.” They have implemented a number of reforms in recent months to speed up the timeline that families are checked into the detention centers, taken through the legal process, and ultimately released. But there is no indication that the administration is at all willing to shutter the facilities entirely.









