Monday, February 24, 2025 - President Donald Trump's administration has reportedly directed immigration agents to track down 'hundreds of thousands' of migrant children in the US for deportation.
An internal document from Immigration and Customs and Enforcement (ICE),
headlined the "Unaccompanied Alien Children Joint Initiative Field
Implementation," said the initiative claims to prevent children from being
human trafficked or other types of exploitation.
There are more than 600,000 migrant children who have crossed the
U.S.-Mexico border without a legal guardian or parent since 2019, according to
government data.
The plan which lays out four phases of implementation, said minors would
be served a notice to appear in immigration court or deported if deportation
orders were pending against them.
ICE collected data on unaccompanied minors and sorted them into three
groups: "flight risk," "public safety" and "border
security." Agents were told to prioritize "flight risk" minors,
including those who have received orders of deportation for missing court
hearings, the source said of the internal document.
The move from the Trump administration comes after Republicans claimed
last year that the Biden administration "lost 300,000" migrant
children -- a figure experts and advocates say lacks context.
The claims come from a DHS internal watchdog report last year that found
that ICE had not served notices to appear to more than 291,000 unaccompanied
migrant children.
The internal watchdog warned that in the past five years, more than
32,000 unaccompanied migrant children failed to appear for their immigration
court hearings, and ICE was "not able to account" for all of their
locations.
"The unique needs of children require the administration to ensure
a level of care that takes into account their vulnerability while it determines
whether they need long-term protection in the United States," Wendy
Young, the President of Kids in Need of Defense said in a statement to ABC
News.
"To be successful in its goals, the government must partner with
legal service providers and the vast network of private sector pro bono
partners who provide millions of dollars in free legal services to ensure
children understand the process and can share their reasons for seeking safety
in the United States. Then the government can decide with confidence who needs
protection and who can safely return to their country of origin," Young
added.
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