Los Angeles Times

Migrant youths must get sleep, soap, court affirms

Trump administra­tion loses appeal on safe, sanitary conditions

- By Maura Dolan

FRANCISCO — In a case that dramatized the plight of children detained at the border, a federal appeals court Thursday upheld an order requiring immigratio­n authoritie­s to provide minors with adequate food, water, bedding, toothbrush­es and soap.

A three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected an appeal by the Trump administra­tion to an order by a Los Angeles federal judge who found the government was violating a 1997 settlement. The settlement requires the government to provide detained minors with safe and sanitary conditions.

U.S. District Judge Dolly M. Gee issued the order in 2017 after finding that children in U.S. Customs and Border Protection custody did not have adequate food, clean water or basic hygiene items and were held in conditions that deprived them of sleep.

The settlement, known as the Flores agreement, required the children be given safe and sanitary quarters.

The government appealed, arguing that the order changed the settlement agreement. The original settlement said nothing about allowing children to sleep or wash themselves with soap, the federal government said.

The 9th Circuit disagreed, saying the enumerated items ordered by the judge fell under the settlement’s requiremen­t that children be kept in safe and sanitary conditions. Because Gee’s order did not modify the settlement, there was no basis for appeal, the court said.

“Assuring that children eat enough edible food, drink clean water, are housed in hygienic facilities with sanitary bathrooms, have soap and toothpaste, and are not sleep-deprived are without doubt essential to the children’s safety,” wrote Judge Marsha S. Berzon, a Clinton appointee.

The case stirred nationwide outrage in June when a video of the 9th Circuit hearing on it went viral.

During the hearing, Judge A. Wallace Tashima, a Clinton appointee, appeared incredulou­s that a lawyer for the federal government would not quickly concede that having soap and toothbrush­es was a necessary requiremen­t for saniSAN tary conditions.

Gee issued the order after finding minors were “not receiving hot, edible or a sufficient number of meals during a given day”; lacked clean drinking water, clean bedding, toothbrush­es, soap and towels; and endured “sleep deprivatio­n” as a result of cold temperatur­es, overcrowdi­ng, lack of proper bedding and constant lighting.

The case stemmed from a class-action lawsuit filed by lawyers representi­ng minors at the border. The settlement reached in the case took the form of a consent decree in 1997.

Last year, Gee appointed an independen­t monitor to examine the conditions at Customs and Border Protection detention facilities along the border in the Rio Grande Valley in Texas.

Attorneys who had visited Border Patrol stations, ports of entry and detention centers filed a scathing report in July 2018, describing inhumane conditions there.

The report contained interviews with detainees who described sleeping on concrete, receiving only three mattresses for 18 people, using toilets without doors and without soap or paper towels, eating frozen sandwiches and being held in freezing cells.

 ?? John Moore Getty Images ?? WOMEN AND CHILDREN sit in a Border Patrol holding cell last year. A panel of the 9th Circuit rejected the government’s appeal that federal rules say nothing about allowing youth detainees to sleep or wash with soap.
John Moore Getty Images WOMEN AND CHILDREN sit in a Border Patrol holding cell last year. A panel of the 9th Circuit rejected the government’s appeal that federal rules say nothing about allowing youth detainees to sleep or wash with soap.

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