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HARLINGEN, Texas — A federal judge has temporarily halted flights sending migrant children back to Guatemala. This decision came after attorneys argued that the government was violating laws and endangering the children’s safety.
This situation unfolded dramatically over a holiday weekend, spanning from Texas tarmacs to Washington courtrooms. It highlights a conflict between the Trump administration’s immigration policies and the legal protections established for at-risk migrants.
Per the judge’s ruling, Guatemalan children who reached the border unaccompanied will remain in the U.S. for at least two weeks as the legal proceedings continue.
“I do not want there to be any ambiguity,” said U.S. District Judge Sparkle L. Sooknanan.
Shortly after the emergency hearing, several charter buses arrived at Valley International Airport in Harlingen, Texas, a known location for deportation flights. Earlier, authorities escorted approximately 50 individuals to a restricted area of the airport, identifiable by the clothing typical of those in government-operated centers for migrant youth.
According to the Justice Department’s court filing, all 76 children on the flights were expected to be returned to shelters managed by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services by Sunday evening.
“The notion of waking up these vulnerable children and putting them on a plane during a long weekend, regardless of their constitutional rights, should be appalling to all Americans,” stated Kica Matos, president of the National Immigration Law Center, which represents the children, after the hearing.
The Homeland Security Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the ruling.
The chaotic, rapid-fire developments resembled a March weekend showdown over the deportation of hundreds of Venezuelans to a maximum-security prison in El Salvador. Advocates implored a federal judge to halt deportations they believed were imminent, while the Trump administration was silent about its plans.
In that case, the judge appeared in civilian clothes for a Saturday night hearing and tried to block the flights, but they went ahead, with the government saying the court order came too late.
The administration insisted it was reuniting the Guatemalan children – at the Central American nation’s request – with parents or guardians who sought their return. Lawyers for at least some of the children say that’s untrue and argue that in any event, authorities still would have to follow a legal process that they did not.
One girl said her parents, in Guatemala, got a strange phone call a few weeks ago saying the U.S. was deporting her, said one of the plaintiff attorneys, Efrén C. Olivares.
The 16-year-old, who’s been living in a New York shelter, said in a court filing that she’s an honors student about to start 11th grade, loves living in the U.S. and is “deeply afraid of being deported.”
Other children – identified only by their initials – said in court documents that they had been neglected, abandoned, physically threatened or abused in their home country.
“I do not have any family in Guatemala that can take good care of me,” a 10-year-old said in a court filing. A 16-year-old recalled experiencing “threats against my life” in Guatemala.
“If I am sent back, I believe I will be in danger,” the teen added.
Sunday’s court hearing came in a case filed in federal court in Washington, but similar legal actions also were filed elsewhere.
In a lawsuit in Arizona, the Florence Immigrant & Refugee Rights Project said one of its clients is a 12-year-old asylum-seeker who has chronic kidney disease, needs dialysis to stay alive and will need a kidney transplant. Two other plaintiffs, a 10-year-old boy and his 3-year-old sister, don’t have family in Guatemala and don’t want to return, according to the group.
As the developments played out in the U.S., families gathered at an air base in Guatemala’s capital, Guatemala City, in anticipation of the flights. Gilberto López said he drove through the night from his remote town after his 17-year-old nephew called at midnight to say he was being deported from Texas.
The boy left Guatemala two years ago, at age 15, to work in the U.S. and was detained about a month ago, López said.
Alarm bells for immigrant advocates
Migrant children who arrive in the U.S. without their parents or guardians are routinely handed over to the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Refugee Resettlement. They often live in government-supervised shelters or with foster care families until they can be released to a sponsor – usually a relative – in the U.S.
Many of those from Guatemala request asylum or pursue other legal avenues to get permission to stay.
An attorney with the National Center for Youth Law said the organization starting hearing a few weeks ago from legal service providers that Homeland Security Investigations agents were interviewing children – particularly Guatemalans – in facilities of the Office of Refugee Resettlement.
The agents asked the children about their relatives in Guatemala, said the attorney, Becky Wolozin.
Then, on Friday, advocates began getting word that their young clients’ immigration court hearings were being canceled, Wolozin said.
Shaina Aber of Acacia Center for Justice, an immigrant legal defense group, said it was notified Saturday evening that officials had drafted a list of children to return to Guatemala. Advocates learned that the flights would leave from the Texas cities of Harlingen and El Paso, Aber said.
The government had two planes on the ground in Harlingen and one in El Paso, Texas, Olivares said, based on witness accounts. Government lawyer Drew Ensign told the judge that one plane might have taken off but returned.
White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller said on X that the Guatemalan government formally requested the children’s return and that the judge was “refusing to let them reunify with their parents.”
Judge got a 2:30 a.m. call
The judge said she was awakened at 2:30 a.m. to address the emergency filing from the children’s lawyers, who wrote in bold type that flights might be leaving within the ensuing two to four hours. Sooknanan spent hours trying to reach federal attorneys and get answers, she said.
“I have the government attempting to remove unaccompanied minors from the country in the wee hours of the morning on a holiday weekend, which is surprising,” Sooknanan said at the midday hearing, later adding: “Absent action by the courts, all of those children would have been returned to Guatemala, potentially to very dangerous situations.”
The Trump administration is planning to remove nearly 700 Guatemalan children who came to the U.S. unaccompanied, according to a letter sent Friday by Sen. Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat.
Late Sunday, Guatemala’s government said in a statement that it had originally proposed the transfer of the minors to U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem during her visit to the country in July. Guatemala’s concern was that hundreds of minors would soon age out of the juvenile facilities where they were held and be sent to adult detention centers. It stressed that it was ready to receive the minors when due process was completed in the U.S. following established protocols.
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Santana reported from Washington and Peltz from New York. Associated Press writers Sonia Pérez D. in Guatemala City and Corey Williams in Detroit contributed to this report.
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