A federal court in Tucson has ruled to extend a temporary restraining order preventing dozens of children from Guatemala and Honduras from being deported.
The law firm Florence Immigrant and Refugee Rights Project filed suit on behalf of 53 Guatemalan children in Arizona after learning of administration plans to send them on nighttime flights back to Guatemala.
Florence Project deputy director Roxana Avila-Cimpeanu says the latest filing includes four more Guatemalan children and 12 from Honduras.
"We included Honduran children in order to protect their rights. We included them to ensure that they have the opportunity to present their case to an immigration judge and to go through the proper process," Avila-Cimpeanu said.
Avila-Cimpeanu says Florence Project lawyers started to notice Honduran children were receiving the same DHS visits for removal. U.S. District Judge Rosemary Márquez ruled this week to extend the bar on deportations until September 26th.
"What we’re seeing right now is that the government is very clearly violating laws, this is an unprecedented and escalating attack on the rights of immigrant children that is being done under the guise of child welfare," Avila-Cimpeanu said.
Avila-Cimpeanu says Florence Project lawyers added Honduran children to the suit after learning they could be next.
The latest ruling extends the deportation bar until Sept. 26.
Márquez raised concern over whether the government had arranged for any of the children's parents or legal guardians in Guatemala to take custody of them.
Laura Belous, attorney for the Florence Immigrant & Refugee Rights Project, which represents the children, said in court that the minors expressed no desire to be repatriated to their native countries of Guatemala and Honduras amid concerns they could face neglect, possible child trafficking or hardships associated with individual medical conditions.
Lawyers for the children said their clients fear going home and the government is not following laws designed to protect migrant children.
Belous' organization filed a lawsuit in Arizona on behalf of 57 Guatemalan children and another 12 from Honduras between the ages 3 and 17.
Trump administration seeks to deport unaccompanied children from Washington, D.C., too
The suit, along with a related lawsuit before a federal judge in Washington, D.C., responds to the Trump administration’s Labor Day weekend attempt to remove Guatemalan migrant children who were living in government shelters and foster care after coming to the U.S. alone.
In a late night operation Aug. 30, the administration notified shelters that they would be returning the children to Guatemala and needed to have the kids ready to leave in a matter of hours. Scores of children got as far as boarding planes in Texas on the morning of Aug. 31 and were set to depart to Guatemala.
At Thursday’s hearing in Tucson, Denise Ann Faulk, an assistant U.S. attorney under the Trump administration, emphasized that the child repatriations were negotiated with Guatemala at high diplomatic levels and would avoid lengthy prohibitions on returning to the U.S.
Nearly all the children were in the custody of the U.S. Health and Human Services Department’s Office of Refugee Resettlement and living at shelters in the Phoenix and Tucson areas. Similar lawsuits filed in Illinois and Washington, D.C., seek to stop the government from removing the children.
The Arizona lawsuit demands that the government allow the children their right to present their cases to an immigration judge, to have access to legal counsel and to be placed in the least restrictive setting that is in their best interest.
The Trump administration has argued it is acting in the best interest of the children by trying to reunite them with their families at the behest of the Guatemalan government. After Guatemalan officials toured U.S. detention facilities, the government said that it was “very concerned” and that it would take children who wanted to return voluntarily.
Details reflect shifting immigration patterns
Children began crossing the border alone in large numbers in 2014, peaking at 152,060 in the 2022 fiscal year. July’s arrest tally translates to an annual clip of 5,712 arrests, reflecting how illegal crossings have dropped to their lowest levels in six decades.
Guatemalans accounted for 32% of residents at government-run holding facilities last year, followed by Hondurans, Mexicans and Salvadorans. A 2008 law requires children to appear before an immigration judge with an opportunity to pursue asylum, unless they are from Canada and Mexico. The vast majority are released from shelters to parents, legal guardians or immediate family while their cases wind through court.
The Arizona lawsuit was amended to include 12 children from Honduras who have expressed to an Arizona legal aid group that they do not want to return to Honduras, as well as four additional children from Guatemala who have come into government custody in Arizona since the lawsuit was initially filed on Aug. 30.
Judge Márquez said she found it “frightening” that U.S. officials may not have coordinated with the children's parents. She also expressed concern that the government was denying the children access to review by an experienced immigration judge, and noted that legal representatives for the children were notified of preparations for child departures with little notice, late at night.
“On a practical matter, it just seems that a lot of these things that (the Office of Refugee Resettlement) has taken upon themselves to do — such as screening and making judicial determinations that should be made by an immigration judge with expertise and time to meet with a lawyer and meet with a child — is just surpassed by saying ‘we’re reuniting them’” with parents, Márquez said in court as she pressed Faulk for more information.
Márquez was appointed as a federal judge in 2014 after being nominated by then-President Barack Obama. In documents related to her confirmation, she listed herself as having volunteered at the Florence Immigrant & Refugee Rights project in the early 2000s. A message seeking comment from the judge was left Thursday with her clerk’s office.
-
A funding bill passed by the US House this week allocates some sixty four billion dollars to the Department of Homeland Security — including some $10 billion directly to ICE.
-
Weeks have passed since a national report by The Bulwark said Phoenix would soon become the focus of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Now Phoenix police say they don't use tactics the federal agency has become known for.
-
Pinal County’s top prosecutor says his enforcement agreement with Immigration and Customs Enforcement remains in effect despite the Board of Supervisors having declared it void.
-
Tucson Mayor Regina Romero and the council voted unanimously this week to direct the city attorney to draft an ordinance that would bar ICE from staging enforcement operations on city-owned property. It also aims to set up a policy for handling requests from the federal government to use city facilities.
-
The portal’s homepage says members of the public should use the form to report potentially unlawful activity by federal personnel from agencies like ICE, Customs and Border Protection, and Homeland Security Investigations.