People left to navigate immigration court complexities alone after
federally funded aid pulled
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[February 03, 2025]
By KATE BRUMBACK
Just days after President Donald Trump's second inauguration, Ruby
Robinson went to Detroit's immigration court to post a notice that a
help desk his organization ran for people facing deportation was no
longer available.
The desk staffed by the Michigan Immigrant Rights Center shut down after
a Trump executive order prompted the Justice Department to instruct
nonprofit organizations “to stop work immediately” on four federally
funded programs that provided information to people in immigration
proceedings.
“There were individuals in the waiting room who we otherwise would have
been able to assist, but we're not able to do so at this time,” said
Robinson, managing attorney for the center, which he said has helped
about 10,000 people since it began operating the help desk in December
2021.
Without the programs that educate people in immigration courts and
detention centers about their rights and the complicated legal process,
many will end up navigating the system on their own. Advocates worry
that due process and the backlogged immigration courts will suffer as
Trump tries to make good on his campaign promise to crack down on
illegal immigration.
A coalition of nonprofit groups that provide the services filed a
lawsuit Friday challenging the stop-work order and seeking to
immediately restore access to the programs.
Despite the loss of federal funding, staff from the Amica Center for
Immigrant Rights went to a Virginia detention center to provide services
the day after the Jan. 22 stop-work order. They had spoken to about two
dozen people when detention center staff escorted them out, telling them
they could no longer provide those services, Amica executive director
Michael Lukens said, describing the stoppage as “devastating.”
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“We often hear that people don’t know what’s happening. Why are they
detained? What’s going to happen next? And we are being stopped from
even giving that basic level of orientation,” Lukens said.
Lawyers running a help desk inside Chicago’s busy immigration court
provided services to more than 2,000 people in 2024. The National
Immigrant Justice Center started the effort in 2013 with private funding
and expanded it three years later with federal funds.
Since the stop-work order, the organization has provided scaled-down
services, but they are unsure how long they will be able to continue
that with the gap left by federal funding cuts, spokesperson Tara
Tidwell Cullen said.
Several organizations said they’ve been told that posters informing
people of their services and information about legal help hotlines have
been removed from detention centers.
Congress allocates $29 million a year for the four programs — the Legal
Orientation Program, the Immigration Court Helpdesk, the Family Group
Legal Orientation and the Counsel for Children Initiative — funding
that's spread among various groups across the country providing the
services, Lukens said, adding that the programs have broad bipartisan
support. The amount is the same regardless of the number of people
they're helping, and the organizations often do additional fundraising
to cover their costs, he said.
Trump previously targeted these programs during his first term, but this
time things are different.
In 2018, then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced that the funding
would be pulled from the programs, but the threat of legal action by a
coalition of organizations that provide the services, as well as
bipartisan support from members of Congress, caused the Justice
Department to reverse course.
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After waiting in a cue, people are led into a downtown Chicago
building where an immigration court presides Tuesday, Nov. 12, 2024,
in Chicago. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast, File)
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This time, the action was more abrupt, with the stop-work order
issued just hours before it took effect and program staff being
barred from detention centers.
Immigration law is incredibly complicated and, unlike in criminal
courts, people do not have a right to have an attorney appointed if
they cannot afford one, and many end up going through the system
without legal representation.
Immigration courts throughout the country are clogged by a backlog
of about 3.7 million cases, which can leave people in limbo for
years. When people know what to expect and have their affairs in
order, hearings move more quickly because judges don't have to
explain the basics to each person who appears before them, advocates
assert. It can also reduce lines at filing windows in immigration
courts because people know what forms they have to fill out and can
get help completing them correctly.
People can make informed choices to either move forward with a case
knowing their chances and the risks involved or, if they don't want
to go through a court battle or don't see any available relief that
fits their situation, they may decide not to fight and to just go
home, said Edna Yang, co-executive director of American Gateways,
which operates in three detention centers and the immigration court
in San Antonio, Texas.
“Stopping programs that actually help people get the information
they need isn’t going to fix the system,” Yang said. “It’s just
going to make it worse.”
The organizations also make sure due process rights are respected,
alert people to imminent filing deadlines, ensure that translators
are available and help avoid deportation orders that could
unlawfully return asylum seekers to a harmful situation, advocates
said.
Milagro, a 69-year-old woman from Venezuela, arrived in the U.S. in
May 2024 when she got an appointment through a U.S. government app
after spending four years in Mexico. The Associated Press agreed not
to use her last name because she fears that speaking out could
affect her pending case.
She filed an asylum application, citing a fear for her life in
Venezuela as part of the political opposition. She didn’t have a job
when she arrived and used the help desk operated by Estrella del
Paso at the immigration court in El Paso, Texas, for help with her
asylum application. The last time she went, she discovered it was
closed because of the stop-work order.
“You feel a kind of frustration because the window that you had open
to ask, to get advice, is closed,” she said in Spanish. “It is a
feeling of helplessness and loneliness.”
Without their help, she said, “I would have had to pay money that I
do not have.”
But with a court appearance coming up in February, she fears she
will have to use much of the salary she earns as a caretaker for a
100-year-old woman to pay someone to help her.
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Associated Press writers Gisela Salomon in Miami and Sophia Tareen
in Chicago contributed reporting.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved
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