Arab Times

Judge blocks rules for detained migrant kids

‘Flores agreement’

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LOS ANGELES, Sept 28, (AP): A US judge on Friday blocked new Trump administra­tion rules that would enable the government to keep immigrant children in detention facilities with their parents indefinite­ly.

US District Court Judge Dolly Gee in Los Angeles said the rules conflict with a 1997 settlement agreement that requires the government to release immigrant children caught on the border as quickly as possible to relatives in the US and says they can only be held in facilities licensed by a state.

Gee said the Flores agreement – named for a teenage plaintiff – will remain in place and govern the conditions for all immigrant children in US custody, including those with their parents.

“The agreement has been necessary, relevant, and critical to the public interest in maintainin­g standards for the detention and release of minors arriving at the United States’ borders,” the judge wrote in her decision.

“Defendants willingly negotiated and bound themselves to these standards for all minors in its custody, and no final regulation­s or changed circumstan­ces yet merit terminatio­n of the Flores agreement.”

The Trump administra­tion sought to end the agreement and issued the new rules with the hope of detaining immigrant children in facilities with their parents. The move came as part of a broader crackdown on asylum seekers arriving on the Southwest border, many of them families with children from Central America.

The Flores agreement allows for the settlement to be phased out when rules are issued for the custody of immigrant children that are consistent with its terms.

Attorneys who represent detained immigrant children welcomed Gee’s position, which she initially conveyed to them in a draft ruling during a court hearing Friday. They said they wouldn’t let the administra­tion use young immigrants to try to deter migrants fleeing desperate conditions from seeking asylum in the United States.

“We will continue vigorously to defend the rights of detained immigrant children,” Neha Desai, director of immigratio­n at the National Center for Youth Law, told reporters.

The Department of Justice said the administra­tion is disappoint­ed with the ruling because it did what was required to implement the new rules.

On Friday night, the White House issued a statement criticizin­g the judge’s ruling.

“For two and a half years, this Administra­tion has worked to restore faithful enforcemen­t of the laws enacted by Congress, while activist judges have imposed their own vision in the place of those duly enacted laws,” the statement said. “The Flores 20-day Loophole violates Congressio­nal removal and detention mandates, creating a new system out of judicial whole cloth. This destructiv­e end-run around the detention and removal system Congress created must end.”

Also:

LOS ANGELES:

A federal judge Friday blocked Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t from relying solely on flawed databases to target people for being in the country illegally, the Los Angeles Times reported.

US District Court Judge Andre Birrote Jr issued a permanent injunction barring ICE from relying only on the databases when issuing detainers, which are requests made to police agencies to keep people who have been arrested in custody for up two days beyond the time they would otherwise be held, the Times reported.

The judge’s ruling in a class-action lawsuit also blocks ICE from issuing detainers to state and local law enforcemen­t in states where there isn’t a statute authorizin­g civil immigratio­n arrests on detainers, the Times reports.

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