Exclusive: U.S. memo weakens guidelines
for protecting immigrant children in court
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[December 23, 2017]
By Mica Rosenberg
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The U.S. Justice
Department has issued new guidelines for immigration judges that remove
some instructions for how to protect unaccompanied juveniles appearing
in their courtrooms.
A Dec. 20 memo, issued by the Executive Office for Immigration Review
(EOIR) replaces 2007 guidelines, spelling out policies and procedures
judges should follow in dealing with children who crossed the border
illegally alone and face possible deportation.
The new memo removes suggestions contained in the 2007 memo for how to
conduct "child-sensitive questioning" and adds reminders to judges to
maintain "impartiality" even though "juvenile cases may present
sympathetic allegations." The new document also changes the word "child"
to "unmarried individual under the age of 18" in many instances.
An EOIR official said the new memo contained "clarifications and
updates" to 10-year-old guidance "in order to be consistent with the
laws as they've been passed by Congress." The new memo was posted on the
Justice Department website but has not been previously reported.
Immigration advocates said they worry the new guidelines could make
court appearances for children more difficult, and a spokeswoman for the
union representing immigration judges said judges are concerned about
the tone of the memo.
President Donald Trump has made tougher immigration enforcement a key
policy goal of his administration, and has focused particularly on
trying to curb the illegal entry of children. The administration says it
wants to prevent vulnerable juveniles from making perilous journeys to
the United States and eliminate fraud from programs for young
immigrants.
One changed section of the memo focuses on how to make children
comfortable in the court in advance of hearings. The old guidance says
they "should be permitted to explore" courtrooms and allowed to "sit in
all locations, (including, especially, the judge's bench and the witness
stand)."
The new guidance says such explorations should take place only "to the
extent that resources and time permit" and specifically puts the judge's
bench off limits.
The new memo also warns judges to be skeptical, since an unaccompanied
minor "generally receives more favorable treatment under the law than
other categories of illegal aliens," which creates "an incentive to
misrepresent accompaniment status or age in order to attempt to qualify
for the benefits." It also says to be on the lookout for "fraud and
abuse," language that was not in the previous memo.
'WOLVES IN SHEEP CLOTHING'
Immigration judges are appointed by the U.S. Attorney General and courts
are part of the Department of Justice, not an independent branch. The
only sitting immigration judges routinely allowed to speak to the media
are representatives of their union, the National Association of
Immigration Judges.
Dana Marks, a sitting judge and spokeswoman for the union, said the
"overall tone" of the memo "is very distressing and concerning to
immigration judges."
"There is a feeling that the immigration courts are just being demoted
into immigration enforcement offices, rather than neutral arbiters,"
Marks said. "There has been a relentless beating of the drum toward
enforcement rather than due process."
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Detainees sleep in a holding cell at a U.S. Customs and Border
Protection processing facility, in Brownsville, Texas June 18, 2014.
REUTERS/Eric Gay/Pool/File Photo
Former immigration judge Andrew Arthur, who now works at the Center
for Immigration Studies, which promotes lower levels of immigration
overall, said the new guidelines were needed.
In their previous form, he said, "so much emphasis was placed on the
potential inability of the alien to understand the proceedings ...
that it almost put the judge into the position of being an
advocate."
The courts have had to handle a surge in cases for unaccompanied
minors, mostly from Central America, after their numbers
sky-rocketed in 2014 as violence in the region caused residents to
flee north.
While illegal crossings initially fell after Trump took office, U.S.
Customs and Border Protection said that since May, each month has
seen an increase in children being apprehended either alone or with
family members.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions said in a speech in Boston in
September that the special accommodations for unaccompanied minors
had been exploited by "gang members who come to this country as
wolves in sheep clothing."
Echoing some of these concerns, the new memo notes in a preamble
that not all child cases involve innocents, and that the courts
might see "an adolescent gang member" or "a teenager convicted as an
adult for serious criminal activity."
Jennifer Podkul, policy director of Kids in Need of Defense (KIND)
said Congress included special procedural protections for immigrant
children in a 2008 anti-trafficking bill to "make sure that a kid
gets a fair shot in the courtroom."
"These kids are by themselves telling a very complicated and
oftentimes very traumatic story," said Podkul. "The approach of this
memo, which is much more suspicious, is not going to help get to the
truth of a child's story."
In cases where children are called to testify, the old guidance
instructed judges to "seek to limit the amount of time the child is
on the stand." The new guidance says that judges should "consider"
limiting the child's time on the stand "without compromising due
process for the opposing party," which is generally a government
prosecutor.
The memo leaves in a range of special accommodations made for
children, including allowing them to bring a pillow or booster seat
or a "toy, book, or other personal item." It also maintains that
cases involving unaccompanied minors should be heard on a separate
docket when possible and that children should not be detained or
transported with adults.
(Reporting by Mica Rosenberg; Editing by Sue Horton and Mary
Milliken)
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