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- Reno v. Flores, 507 U. S. 292 (1993) - Justia U. S. Supreme Court Center
Reno v Flores: Immigration and Naturalization Service regulation—which provides that alien juveniles detained on suspicion of being deportable may be released only to a parent, legal guardian, or other related adult—accords with both Due Process Clause and Immigration and Nationality Act
- Flores v. Reno - National Center for Youth Law
NCYL and co-counsel filed Flores v Reno in 1985 to address the egregious harms immigrant children in federal custody faced The case was settled in 1997 and remains under the supervision of U S District Judge Dolly M Gee in the Central District of California
- Reno v. Flores, 507 U. S. 292 (1993).
In the case of arrested alien juveniles, however, the INS cannot simply send them off into the night on bond or recognizance The parties to the present suit agree that the Service must assure itself that someone will care for those minors pending resolution of their deportation proceedings
- Reno v. Flores - Wikipedia
Flores, 507 U S 292 (1993), was a Supreme Court of the United States case that addressed the detention and release of unaccompanied minors
- Case: Flores v. Reno - Clearinghouse
On July 11, 1985, attorneys from the National Center for Immigrants' Rights, the National Center for Youth Law, and the ACLU Foundation of Southern California represented four minors who filed this class action complaint aga…
- Documents Relating to Flores v. Reno Settlement Agreement on . . . - AILA
Several immigration and legal advocacy groups filed a motion seeking emergency relief to remedy an “imminent threat to the health and welfare” of class member children allegedly detained for days and weeks at CBP facilities in the El Paso and Rio Grande Valley Border Patrol Sectors
- Reno v. Flores (Reno v. Flores, 507 U. S. 292, 113 S. Ct. 1439 . . . - vLex
Pursuant to a consent decree entered earlier in the litigation, juveniles who are not released must be placed in juvenile care facilities that meet or exceed state licensing requirements for the provision of services to dependent children
- The Flores Settlement - Immigration History
The Flores settlement resulted from the 1993 Supreme Court case Reno v Flores, regarding the treatment of unaccompanied minors in immigration detention The settlement, currently being challenged, set federal standards for the treatment and release of children in detention
- Reno v. Flores – Case Brief Summary – Facts, Issue, Holding Reasoning . . .
In Reno v Flores, a class of alien juveniles was arrested by the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) on suspicion of being deportable and detained under a 1988 regulation codified at 8 C F R § 242 24
- RENO v. FLORES | No. 91-905 | U. S. | Judgment | Law | CaseMine
Finally, respondents claim that the regulation is an abuse of discretion because it permits the INS, once having determined that an alien juvenile lacks an available relative or legal guardian, to hold the juvenile in detention indefinitely That is not so
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