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Immigrant kids detained in “unsafe and unsanitary” sites as Trump administration seeks to end protection

A child developed a rash after he was prevented from changing his underwear for four days. A little boy, bored and overcome with despair, began hitting himself in the head. A child with autism and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder was forced to go without his medication, despite his mother’s pleas. 

“I heard one officer say about us ‘they smell like sh–,'” one detained person recounted in a federal court filing. “And another officer responded, ‘They are sh–.'”

Attorneys for immigrant children collected these stories, and more, from youth and families detained in what they called “prison-like” settings across the U.S. from March through June, even as the Trump administration has requested a federal district court judge terminate existing protections that mandate basic rights and services — including safe and sanitary conditions — for children held by the government. 

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