top of page
The Need to Update the Registry Now
Setting the standard for detained immigrant children's living conditions and reuniting them with their families under the Flores Settlement.
The Issue
Our CBP Monitoring aims to ensure accountability and transparency in CBP’s treatment of immigrant children and families. By observing their detention practices, we work to protect the rights of vulnerable populations and ensure compliance with established standards of care and humane treatment.
How we Have Unique Access
In 1997, after ten years of litigation, CHRCL reached a historic nationwide settlement with the Government addressing the conditions of detention of immigrant minors and their right to release from custody. In summary, the Flores Settlement requires the Government to detain minors in facilities licensed for the care of dependent minors. It requires that detained minors have access to a range of services including health care, education, and family reunification services. It appoints CHRCL Executive Director Peter Schey and General Counsel Carlos Holguin as class counsel for all detained minors nationwide.
Fighting on Behalf of Children
We are authorized to visit border patrol facilities detaining thousands of immigrant children in Texas, Arizona, and California. With the help of volunteer lawyers and child welfare experts, we have interviewed hundreds of detained minors in Border Patrol facilities. In 2022, CHRCL reached a new settlement creating detailed policies for the Rio Grande and El Paso Border Patrol Sectors must follow where over 80% of minors are detained. The 2022 settlement requires the appointment of an independent medical monitor and among other rights requires children to be provided clothing, bedding, hygiene products, showers, adequate food, and routine medical exams and treatment as needed.
Freedom for Families
Under recent administrations, tens of thousands of children were detained with their parents at a cost of hundreds of millions of dollars to taxpayers. CHRCL won several court orders improving the conditions of detention for these children and requiring their release from custody in about twenty days. In 2021, with the support of numerous organizations, CHRCL urged the Biden administration to end the practice of detaining family units. In response, the Biden Administration terminated family detention, and many families are now promptly released and may apply for forms of relief allowing them to remain in the U.S.
Lawful Rights of Detained Minors
In 2022 CHRCL, in collaboration with the National Center for Youth Law, won a nationwide injunction which requires the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) to decide promptly Family Reunification Applications (FRA) and inform parents or other close relatives of its reasons for refusing to reunify them with their detained minors. For any child not promptly released ORR must provide an administrative hearing before the Assistant Secretary for Children and Families or a designee at which ORR reasons for denying release may be tested.
Monitoring Detention Sites
As class counsel for all detained minors, CHRCL Legal Director Carlos Holguin is authorized to inspect all facilities where immigrant minors are detained and interview minors held at those facilities. Additionally, we are authorized to deputize volunteer attorneys, child welfare experts, and interpreters to participate in these inspections and interviews.
Partnerships
For many years we have worked with community-based organizations and legal services groups routinely exchanging information and providing updates, technical support, and trainings regarding the rights of detained minors under the Flores 1997 settlement and subsequent Court orders. Legal services organization and pro-bono attorneys representing immigrant minors may contact us for technical support needed to resolve individual cases. For cases involving unaccompanied minors detained by ORR please email crholguin@centerforhumanrights.org.
bottom of page