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		19 states, District of Columbia, sue Trump administration over migrant 
		detention
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		 [August 27, 2019] 
		By Mica Rosenberg 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - Attorneys general for 
		19 states and the District of Columbia sued President Donald Trump's 
		administration on Monday to block a sweeping new rule to indefinitely 
		detain migrant families seeking to settle in the United States.
 
 The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles, was the first 
		in an expected flurry of litigation seeking to stop the rule, officially 
		published on Friday, from taking effect in October.
 
 "This new Trump rule callously puts at risk the safety and well-being of 
		children. It undermines a decades-old agreement reached in court by the 
		federal government to prevent the unlawful detention of immigrant 
		children," California Attorney General Xavier Becerra said in announcing 
		the lawsuit.
 
 The White House did not immediately comment on Monday evening.
 
 The new rule seeks to scrap a 1997 agreement, known as the Flores 
		settlement, which puts a 20-day limit on how long children can be held 
		in immigration detention.
 
		
		 
		
 The settlement was expanded in 2015 to apply not just to unaccompanied 
		children but also to those traveling with their parents.
 
 Trump administration officials say the detention limits have become a 
		"pull" factor for migrants, who hope that if they show up at the 
		U.S.-Mexico border with a child and ask for asylum, they will be allowed 
		in pending a hearing in U.S. immigration court, a practice the president 
		has called "catch-and-release."
 
 The Trump administration's efforts to overturn the Flores settlement are 
		likely to face more than just legal hurdles.
 
 Even if the courts allow the new rule to take effect, there are also 
		practical problems: paying for thousands of additional family detention 
		beds.
 
 U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has only three family detention 
		facilities - two in Texas and one in Pennsylvania - that have between 
		2,500 and 3,000 beds, Acting Secretary of Homeland Security Kevin 
		McAleenan said in announcing the rule last week.
 
 More than 42,000 families, mostly from Central America, were arrested 
		along the U.S. southern border just last month. The July arrest numbers 
		are at record highs, even though they have dropped more than half 
		compared with levels seen in May.
 
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			Migrant families turn themselves to U.S. Border Patrol to seek 
			asylum following an illegal crossing of the Rio Grande in Hidalgo, 
			Texas, U.S., August 23, 2019. REUTERS/Loren Elliott 
            
 
            NOT ENOUGH BEDS
 "Even if the number of border crossings doesn't go back up in the 
			fall, all this (new rule) would enable them to do is to detain a 
			relatively small percentage of the arriving families for longer," 
			said Kevin Landy, a former ICE assistant director responsible for 
			the Office of Detention Policy and Planning under the Obama 
			administration.
 
 Without more space, that practice is likely to continue, Landy said.
 
 Shawn Neudauer, a spokesman for ICE, said the agency could not 
			comment on potential increases to the agency's detention capacity.
 
 Congress mandates how much ICE can spend on immigration detention, 
			and the 2019 budget has $2.8 billion earmarked to pay for 49,500 
			beds for solo adults - but only 2,500 beds for parents and children.
 
 However, ICE is currently detaining more than 55,000 immigrants, a 
			record high, a small percentage of them at family facilities, 
			according to agency statistics.
 
 ICE has also had a hard time finding communities willing to accept 
			the construction of facilities, said Theresa Cardinal Brown, a 
			former policy adviser at U.S. Customs and Border Protection now at 
			the Washington-based Bipartisan Policy Center.
 
 It is also not clear how the family detention rule will work with 
			another Trump administration policy pushing Central American 
			families back to Mexico to wait out their U.S. court hearings there, 
			she said.
 
            
			 
			(Reporting by Mica Rosenberg in New York; Additional reporting by 
			Dan Whitcomb in Los Angeles; Editing by Jonathan Oatis, Bill Tarrant 
			and Sonya Hepinstall) 
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