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Defense of immigrant kids in detention relies on '80s court case

By Kevin Johnson, University of California, Davis
Children participate in a protest against child separation of illegal immigrants detained at the border in the Senate Hart Office Building. Photo by Kevin Dietsch/UPI
Children participate in a protest against child separation of illegal immigrants detained at the border in the Senate Hart Office Building. Photo by Kevin Dietsch/UPI | License Photo

Aug. 2 (UPI) -- The Trump administration's immigration policies have brought an old court case back to life in defense of immigrant children at the border, often referred to as "the Flores settlement."

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The case, which was filed in 1985 and settled in 1997, set the rules that the government must follow when it keeps migrant children in its custody. The latest court order based on the settlement took place on Monday, in which a judge barred immigration authorities from giving children psychotropic drugs without consent of parents or legal guardians.

The Trump administration has requested to amend the settlement to allow it to indefinitely detain migrant children. So far, the courts have denied these requests, and will continue to monitor the detention of migrant children.

So what was the Flores case about?

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Case took years

In the 1980s, the Reagan administration aggressively used detention of Central Americans as a device to deter migration from Central America, where violent civil wars had caused tens of thousands to flee. As a result, the government held in custody Central Americans arrested at the U.S.-Mexico border, including many who sought asylum in the United States because they feared persecution if returned home. Immigrant rights groups filed a series of lawsuits challenging various aspects of the detention policies, including denying access of migrants to counsel, taking steps to encourage them to "consent" to deportation, and detaining them in isolated locations far from families and attorneys.

One suit was filed by the American Civil Liberties Union in 1985 on behalf of Jenny Lisette Flores, a 15-year-old from El Salvador. She had fled violence in her home country to live with an aunt who was in the United States. But Flores was detained by federal authorities at the U.S. border for being undocumented.

The ACLU charged that holding Flores indefinitely violated the U.S. Constitution and the immigration laws. The Flores case made its way to the U.S. Supreme Court.

In its 1993 ruling in the case, the court held that a regulation allowing the government to release a migrant child to a close family member or legal guardian in the United States was legal.

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But the primary legacy of the case was the subsequent settlement, to which both the Clinton administration and the plaintiffs agreed in 1997.

The Flores settlement established standards for the treatment of unaccompanied minors who were in the custody of federal authorities for violating the immigration laws. It requires the federal government to place children with a close relative or family friend "without unnecessary delay," rather than detaining them; and to keep immigrant children who are in custody in the "least restrictive conditions" possible. Generally speaking, this has meant migrant children can only be kept in federal immigrant detention for 20 days.

The ConversationThe Flores settlement created a framework agreed to by the U.S. government that addressed how migrant children were to be treated if they were detained. It is a landmark settlement in no small part because Central Americans continue to flee violence in their homelands and the U.S. government has responded with mass detention of immigrant children. Although the Flores settlement was agreeable to the Clinton administration, the Trump administration wants to detain families, including children, for periods longer than permitted by the Flores settlement.

Kevin Johnson is dean and a professor of public interest law and Chicana/o studies at the University of California, Davis.

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This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

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