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Each week, in immigration courts across the United States, hundreds of children come before immigration judges and are forced to represent themselves against deportation. Many of these children qualify for protections under our laws that would allow them to stay in the United States but do not have access to an attorney to make their case to a judge. Because our immigration system currently does not provide appointed attorneys to children facing deportation, these children are forced to represent themselves in court.
Among them is Arturo, .* Arturo’s mother fled El Salvador and left her son in the care of his aunt. However, because his family continued to fear for his safety in El Salvador, Arturo was brought to the border in Texas, taken into custody by the government, and put into deportation proceedings. He is now in the care of his mother in Los Angeles, who is a lawful permanent resident. Without legal assistance, Arturo has no way to explain to the immigration court whether he may be eligible for protection in the United States.Without legal assistance, Arturo has no way to explain to the immigration court whether he may be eligible for protection in the United States.Although he is only a toddler, the government has put him into deportation proceedings on his own. He has no attorney to help him explain to the court why he should not be deported. His case is not unusual. According to a 2014 report by the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC), less than a third of children with pending immigration cases had legal representation.
Without the help of an attorney, these children are much less likely to be able to stay safely in the United States. The same TRAC report revealed this in stark numbers: children with legal representation were ordered removed in 28% of cases while children without it were ordered removed in 77% of cases.
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