Trump Administration Moves to End Settlement that Protects Immigrant Children; Flores Counsel Vow to Defend Vital Safeguards

The Flores Settlement is more critical than ever to protect immigrant children from indefinite detention in dangerous conditions

May 22, 2025 – Today, the Trump administration filed a motion to terminate the Flores Settlement Agreement, which for years has set the standards for the humane treatment of immigrant children in government custody, many of whom arrive seeking refuge and protection. The motion recycles many of the arguments that have been brought forward by the federal government — and rejected by courts — multiple times. 

If the government’s motion is successful, children in federal immigration custody will no longer be entitled to any of the Settlement’s basic protections, such as the requirement they be provided adequate food, water, and clean clothes, regardless of whether they’re detained with their parents in family detention or alone. 

As immigrant children and families are under attack, the Flores Settlement is more important now than ever before. Right now, children are being detained with their families in egregious conditions, some children are being held in government custody for months, even when their families are ready to take them home. The Settlement remains the primary — and sometimes the only — tool for protecting these children’s freedom, health, and safety.

The Flores co-counsel team of the Center for Human Rights and Constitutional Law (CHRCL), National Center for Youth Law (NCYL), and Children’s Rights (CR) remains steadfast in defending this critical set of protections. 

The government’s move to end the Settlement comes at a time when significantly fewer immigrant children and families are arriving than in recent years—yet those who do are being detained for increasingly longer periods of time. All children—whether accompanied by their parents and detained in Customs and Border Protection (CBP) or Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) family detention facilities, or unaccompanied and held in Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) custody—are facing dangerously prolonged detention that puts their health and well-being at serious risk. Decades of monitoring and interviews with children and their families have shown that the longer a child is detained, the higher the risk of harm and deterioration of physical and mental health. 

“Children who seek refuge in our country should be met with open arms – not imprisonment, deprivation, and abuse,” said Sergio Perez, Executive Director of the Center for Human Rights and Constitutional Law. “The Trump Administration’s move to dismiss this agreement, which prevents the government from imprisoning children in brutal conditions indefinitely, is another lawless step towards sacrificing accountability and human decency in favor of a political agenda that demonizes refugees.”

“Countless children have experienced unimaginable harms while in government custody,” said Mishan Wroe, Senior Attorney at the National Center for Youth Law. “Eviscerating the rudimentary protections that these children have is unconscionable. At this very moment, babies and toddlers are being detained in family detention, and children all over the country are being detained and separated from their families unnecessarily. Now, more than ever, the government needs the accountability that comes with federal court oversight.”

“With their latest legal maneuver, the Trump administration seeks to strip children of basic human rights and subject them to indefinite detention in prison-like border patrol and family detention facilities that no child should endure,” said Leecia Welch, Deputy Litigation Director at Children’s Rights. “Across the country, children are the latest victims of inhumane deportation practices that are ripping them out of their schools and communities.  We will not just stand by while children are locked up and used as political pawns, and we will do everything in our power to defend children’s freedom, dignity and rights.”

Since the Flores Settlement was reached in 1997, ongoing government violations of the Settlement have required co-counsel to repeatedly file motions to enforce the terms of the agreement. Time and again, the court has found the government in breach of the Settlement’s terms and rejected the government’s attempts to terminate the Settlement. 

Below is a partial snapshot of the case over the years, demonstrating the Settlement’s basic protections, the government’s repeated noncompliance, resulting harm to children, and the continued need to safeguard children’s health and safety:

A more complete Flores case docket can be found here.

For nearly three decades, the Flores Settlement has provided basic safeguards for the treatment of children in federal immigration custody. During this time, the government has repeatedly violated the Settlement’s terms and endangered children in its custody. The Flores co-counsel team will continue its relentless fight to defend these children’s health and safety.

Media Contacts

Brittany Novoa, Center for Human Rights and Constitutional Law: press@centerforhumanrights.org

Willis Jacobson, National Center for Youth Law: wjacobson@youthlaw.org

Camilla Jenkins, Children’s Rights: cjenkins@childrensrights.org

The Center for Human Rights and Constitutional Law is a legal non-profit committed to protecting and advancing the rights of immigrants through legal action, advocacy, and education. Through impact litigation, we challenge unlawful immigration policies to drive systemic change and establish stronger legal protections for immigrants. At the local, state, and federal levels, we advocate for fair and humane policies that uphold the rights of all immigrants. For more information, please visit centerforhumanrights.org

The National Center for Youth Law centers youth through research, community collaboration, impact litigation, and policy advocacy that fundamentally transforms our nation’s approach to education, health, immigration, foster care, and youth justice. Attorneys and advocates with the National Center for Youth Law have direct access to children and families in immigration custody, due to the organization’s role as Flores counsel. This has allowed NCYL attorneys to witness, up-close, the harm the current immigration system continues to inflict on children and their families. For more information, visit www.youthlaw.org.

Children’s Rights is a national advocacy organization dedicated to improving the lives of children living in or impacted by America’s child welfare, juvenile legal, immigration, education, and healthcare systems. We use civil rights impact litigation, advocacy and policy expertise, and public education to hold governments accountable for keeping kids safe and healthy. Our work centers on creating lasting systemic change that will advance the rights of children for generations. For more information, please visit childrensrights.org.