ASSOCIATED PRESS

Immigrant children described being put in isolation for eight days, deprived of physical touch and constantly sobbing at a temporary detention center in Homestead, Florida, according to a motion filed by immigration lawyers on Friday. The lawyers claim the facility violates child welfare standards, and want a court order stating the government cannot hold children at Homestead for more than 20 days. “The conditions at Homestead are very similar to conditions in a prison camp,” said Peter Schey, the president and executive director of the Center for Human Rights and Constitutional Law Foundation. “Children detained there suffer tremendous psychological harm.” Some children have been held at the Homestead shelter for more than six months, with the largest group staying between 31 and 60 days, according to the filing, which includes interviews with 75 immigrant minors over the past year. That’s far longer than children are supposed to remain in government custody. The 1997 Flores court settlement requires the government to either promptly release children to sponsors or transfer them to non-secure, licensed facilities “as expeditiously as possible.” Instead, with a 57% increase of unaccompanied immigrant children being apprehended at the border since last year, and an increase in sponsor vetting, teenagers reported being stuck for months. The minors at Homestead described having no idea when they would be released, being passed from one case manager to another and having multiple sponsors denied.

I pray to God that I get to leave here. I feel so alone. A 17-year-old at the detention center

“I pray to God that I get to leave here. I feel so alone,” said a 17-year-old from Guatemala. “It feels like we are prisoners because we have been here for so much time.” An official with the Department of Health and Human Services, which is responsible for caring for children who arrive at the border without their parents, said “the task of releasing each child to the most appropriate sponsor is complex and done with great care.” The department did not respond to a request for comment about the allegation that Homestead is not making prompt efforts to release children. The official said the current average stay in Homestead is down to 33 days, and that the number is subject to change frequently based on many factors. But in February, HHS reported children were held for 67 days in the facility. Only 16% of children are released from the facility within 20 days, according to data analysis by a team at Stanford University’s department of emergency medicine. Immigrant advocates say children are being kept so long in Homestead because of poor case management. Some kids said they were at the facility for 50 days without having their case looked at, while others said they had multiple case managers who would each restart the sponsorship process, said Neha Desai, the director of immigration at the National Center for Youth Law, who has interviewed children at Homestead. A 17-year-old from Guatemala said he had been at the shelter for more than five months, despite the fact that his uncle lives in Miami and had filled out all the paperwork to be his sponsor. A case manager told him he had to wait for others to leave before he could go, and the teenager had no idea of how long that would take. Other teens were held up by the government’s process for approving sponsors. Last March, a 15-year-old girl from Guatemala told lawyers she had been at Homestead for almost five months, with no sense of when she could leave. A case worker said she could not be released to her uncle, who lives in Tennessee, because he lived with friends and did not have photos of himself and his niece together. When a family friend stepped up to take care of B.M., who is identified in the court filing by her initials, the sponsorship was denied because they aren’t blood-related.

I do not know when I can leave this place. I want to get out of here as soon as possible. A 16-year-old at the detention center