The Justice Department has continued some deportation hearings, including those of unaccompanied minors, during the pandemic as the Trump administration seeks to crack down on immigration and complete cases at a faster pace. The move, immigration attorneys say, is likely to put kids, facing deportation, at a greater disadvantage. One example of the challenges confronting children is having to attend hearings without an attorney physically present with them.
For court purposes, the children are considered as detained, therefore their proceedings can continue to move forward during the pandemic. Those in custody are likely to have an upcoming hearing, even if they've tested positive for coronavirus or been exposed to it, although in some of those cases, the appearance of the children has been waived. Most hearings are happening via video or telephone from the shelters where children are staying, the agency stated.
Illegal !!!
I hope this is real news and not your usual fake news.
Tell Trump thanks for killing my town. Open states and now people are running around without masks or gloves. Now I have to watch my family and friends die. Our hospital can't take care of all these people .
GET THESE STINKY ILLEGALS OUT!!!
Psychotic
No, it puts kids that matter more at a greater ADvantage. It's AmericaFirst, baby 😎👍
Whoops!
Then maybe their parents shouldn’t have placed them in this position in the first place.
what? we dont want more people coming here to possibly kill more Americans? how racist!
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