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Alone in court: The U.S. government’s crackdown on unaccompanied migrant kids

  • In Fiscal Year 2024, over 13,000 unaccompanied immigrant children were released to sponsors in Texas amid growing legal and political challenges.
  • This occurred as Congress and the federal government cut legal aid funding, canceled a $200 million contract in March, and imposed stricter policies limiting counsel access.
  • Legal battles included a late April injunction restoring funding after being halted, an appellate court rejection of a pause on this ruling in mid-May, and warnings about children facing court alone.
  • Studies show only 51% of minors have legal representation, which makes children over seven times more likely to remain safely in the U.S., while delayed hearings now extend children’s care from two to over five months.
  • These developments suggest increased trauma and risk for unaccompanied children, spurring advocates to call for accountable leadership and protection of every child's right to legal counsel.
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On Thursday, associations defending the rights of migrants denounce the conditions for the care of exiled young people who have arrived without a parent in France. Unaccompanied minors (MNA) managed

·France
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Lean Right

Guatemala seeks to repatriate 341 migrant minors who traveled alone to the United States and are being held in detention centres.

·Mexico City, Mexico
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+9 Reposted by 9 other sources
Center

Alone in court: The U.S. government’s crackdown on unaccompanied migrant kids

By Nicol León & Gibran Caroline Boyce | Edited by Dianne Solis & Alfredo CorchadoImmigrant children who crossed the border without a parent or guardian are increasingly in the crosshairs of the Trump administration. That has meant children facing immigration judges without lawyers, and stricter screening processes for releases from shelter custody that have prolonged stays to more than five months.

·New Jersey, United States
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The Texas Observer broke the news in on Wednesday, July 2, 2025.
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