This post has been updated.

Update, June 18: Since this story was published, new photos have been released by the US Customs and Border Protection, revealing current detainment conditions for immigrants apprehended at the border. The current conditions closely resemble the Obama-era “cages” depicted in photos from 2014. In both cases, children are shown separated from their families, sleeping on the floor within steel-wire enclosures. Here’s what one detainment facility looks like today:

US Customs and Border Protection Children separated from their parents are provided with metal foil blankets.

US Customs and Border Protection Children who are separated from their parents are supposed to be quickly moved to foster homes or the care of relatives.

US Customs and Border Protection Thousands of immigrant children have been separated from their parents in detention, according to the Department of Homeland Security.

US Customs and Border Protection Wire faces enclose detainees.

US Customs and Border Protection Inside the Trump administration’s “cages” for detained immigrants.

The Obama-era photos, shown below, were initially referenced in May as proof of the cruelty of the Trump administration’s crackdown on immigration. At the time, some decried the pictures as left-leaning propaganda. On May 29, Donald Trump tweeted that the images predate his administration, and accused Democrat of trying “to make us look bad.” However, the newest photos released by US Customs and Border Protection show very similar conditions under the Trump administration.

The Obama-era photos were originally shot for the Associated Press by photographer Ross D. Franklin, during a Jun. 18, 2014 visit to the Customs and Border Protection (CBP) placement center in Nogales, Arizona. The shelters in those photos have since been closed.

This is not the first example of apparently harsh US treatment toward immigrants being attributed to the Trump administration. The recent examples below all date from the Obama administration:

the existence of a special bus for detained children

a Senate report (pdf) about a dozen immigrant children in the US government’s custody who were released to human traffickers

an American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) report detailing “a pattern of intimidation, harassment, physical abuse, refusal of medical services, and improper deportation” by the US Customs and Border Patrol between 2009 and 2014

Here are the 2014 photos from the Nogales facility.

AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin Two young girls watch a 2014 World Cup soccer match on a television from their holding area.

AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin Young boys sleep in a holding cell.

AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin Detainees sleep and watch television in a holding cell.

AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin Young boys sleep in a holding cell.

AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin A young boy walks over to use the toilet while in his holding area.

AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin Young detainees escorted to an area to make phone calls.

AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin Hundreds of mostly Central American immigrant children are separated into age and gender holding areas as they are being processed.