Imperial Valley Press

Judge says US must seek consent to medicate immigrant kids

- BY AMY TAXIN

LOS ANGELES — A federal judge ruled Monday that the U.S. government must seek consent before administer­ing psychotrop­ic drugs to immigrant children held at a Texas facility.

U.S. District Judge Dolly M. Gee in Los Angeles issued a ruling that the federal government violated portions of a longstandi­ng settlement governing the treatment of immigrant children caught crossing the border.

Gee said the government must obtain consent or a court order to give children psychotrop­ic medication­s at a Texas facility under state law unless it’s an emergency.

She also said officials must tell children in writing why they are in a secure facility and that gang affiliatio­n alone doesn’t justify such a placement.

“The kids weren’t getting notice of why they were sent away,” said Holly Cooper, co-director of the Immigratio­n Law Clinic at University of California, Davis, and one of the lawyers representi­ng detained immigrant children. “We view this as a victory.”

The decision comes as the Trump administra­tion has toughened policies toward immigrant children and families caught crossing the U.S.-Mexico border. Immigrant rights advocates have fought back against many of the administra­tion’s moves, including separating immigrant parents and children.

The Department of Justice declined to comment on Gee’s ruling.

Immigrant children caught crossing the border alone are placed in government-contracted facilities until they can be released to screened sponsors in the United States or returned to their countries. Most children are placed in non-secure shelters, but in some cases, more secure placements are used.

In her decision, Gee said she agreed with some but not all requests made by the children’s advocates. While some issues relate to the use of psychotrop­ic drugs and the treatment of children at the Shiloh Treatment Center in Texas, the settlement governing detention conditions is overseen by the federal court in Los Angeles.

Immigrant and children’s advocates also have filed a separate lawsuit in an effort to obtain greater oversight over how and when immigrant children are placed and kept in secure facilities, Cooper said.

 ??  ?? This March 1, file photo from video provided by the National Asian Pacific American Bar Associatio­n (NAPABA) shows U.S. District Judge Dolly Gee in Los Angeles. Gee has ruled that the U.S. government must seek consent before administer­ing psychotrop­ic...
This March 1, file photo from video provided by the National Asian Pacific American Bar Associatio­n (NAPABA) shows U.S. District Judge Dolly Gee in Los Angeles. Gee has ruled that the U.S. government must seek consent before administer­ing psychotrop­ic...

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