Houston Chronicle

Law firms pledge support at border

- By Mark Curriden

Thirty-four large corporate law firms — half of them with offices in Texas and two firms based in Texas — have signed a pledge to provide legal support and resources for immigrant families who are separated from their children when crossing the border to seek asylum.

Two Texas-headquarte­red law firms — Haynes and Boone and Vinson & Elkins — signed the pledge to help reunify parents and children separated by federal officials after they crossed the U.S. border. The law firms also committed to provide lawyers to represent the families in asylum applicatio­ns and proceeding­s.

Several other law firms, including Akin Gump and Bracewell, have committed to providing legal assistance to those in need at the border, but did not participat­e in the formal pledge.

These major corporate law firms, which normally represent Fortune 100 companies, started mobilizing three weeks ago when the Trump administra­tion began enforcing its zero-tolerance policy.

“As a firm with historic roots in Texas, we are concerned and saddened about the legal situation on the Mexican border and the risk that immigrant families could face removal without being afforded due process of law,” said Haynes and Boone managing partner Tim Powers. “We have a deep respect for the rule of law and know it is vital for our country’s laws and regulation­s to be enforced firmly

but also with humanity and empathy.”

Powers and leaders at other law firms say they are working with Texas legal rights organizati­ons, such as Human Rights Initiative of North Texas and Kids In Need of Defense, to represent asylum seekers and unaccompan­ied minors. The firms also are coordinati­ng with each other to provide boots-on-the-ground assistance and are preparing a contingent of lawyers and staff to travel to the border to help with immediate needs.

“As a firm, we are committed to providing pro bono legal services to those who are at risk and most in need,” said V&E Chairman Mark Kelly. “It’s a privilege that the legal profession both affords and obligates us to undertake and is a significan­t part of our firm’s culture. We have represente­d immigrants in their asylum and other immigratio­n claims for decades and we view this as a continuati­on of that important work.”

Fifteen national law firms that have offices in Texas — including Baker McKenzie, Eversheds Sutherland, Fish & Richardson, Hunton Andrews Kurth, Polsinelli and Simpson Thacher — have signed the pledge.

Five lawyers in the Houston and Dallas offices of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, which signed the pledge, have volunteere­d. Houston capital markets partner Hillary Holmes, for example, represents two sisters from Honduras, ages nine and 12. Four associates are going through intensive legal training this week and will be deployed to Port Isabel next week to work with families.

“These are two precious young girls who need our help,” Holmes said. “It will take years to go through the asylum process, but the first goal was to get them out of detention and get them into a safe place.”

Holmes said that many business lawyers do not volunteer because they fear the unknown.

“Lawyers can feel intimidate­d because they either don’t speak Spanish or they are corporate lawyers who don’t know immigratio­n law or they fear that it will take up too much of their time,” she said. “But there are so many ways for lawyers to help and the support system provided by the legal aid agencies means that there really is no excuse for lawyers to not get involved and help.”

Federal statistics show that those seeking asylum are multiple times more likely to be granted protected status if they have a lawyer representi­ng them throughout the process.

Because federal authoritie­s are not charging the immigrants seeking asylum with felony criminal charges, the immigrants are not entitled to a lawyer under past Supreme Court decisions.

As a result, less than one in 10 immigrants have a lawyer representi­ng them in immigratio­n court proceeding­s.

Bracewell officials did not sign the pledge, but lawyers for the Houston-based firm have been involved in pro bono immigratio­n matters for years.

Richard Danysh, a litigation partner in Bracewell’s San Antonio office, works with the CARA Family Detention Pro Bono Project in Dilley to provide representa­tion to women and mothers in preparatio­n for credible fear or reasonable fear interviews with asylum officers.

The counseling is the first non-adversaria­l opportunit­y for the detainees to tell their stories. The interview is the critically important first step in the asylum-seeking process. A negative finding often results in deportatio­n.

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