Garcia Ramirez v. U.S. Immigration and Custom Enforcement

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedJuly 2, 2020
DocketCivil Action No. 2018-0508
StatusPublished

This text of Garcia Ramirez v. U.S. Immigration and Custom Enforcement (Garcia Ramirez v. U.S. Immigration and Custom Enforcement) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Garcia Ramirez v. U.S. Immigration and Custom Enforcement, (D.D.C. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

WILMER GARCIA RAMIREZ, et al., : : Plaintiffs, : Civil Action No.: 18-508 (RC) : v. : : U.S. IMMIGRATION AND CUSTOMS : ENFORCEMENT, et al., : : Defendants. :

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW CONCERNING LIABILITY

This case concerns alleged violations of the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”) by

the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (“ICE” or “the Agency”) in connection with

ICE’s processing of eighteen-year-olds who came to the United States as unaccompanied alien

children (“UACs”). Plaintiffs—immigrant teenagers who entered the United States as UACs—

bring this class action against ICE, the Acting Director of ICE, the Department of Homeland

Security (“DHS”), and the Secretary of Homeland Security (collectively “Defendants” or “the

Government”). When minors lacking immigration status arrive in the United States without

parents or other guardians, they are placed in the custody of the Department of Health and

Human Services, Office of Refugee Resettlement (“HHS” and “ORR”). If they are still in

custody on their eighteenth birthday, the now-adult immigrants “age out” of HHS and ORR

custody and are transferred to ICE custody. Immigrants who undergo this transfer from HHS to

ORR are referred to by the parties as “age-outs” and a subset of these age-outs make up the

plaintiff class in this case. A provision of a 2013 statute amending the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act (“TVPRA”) 1 codified at 8 U.S.C. § 1232(c)(2)(B), requires that

when ICE receives custody of an age-out it must “consider placement in the least restrictive

setting available after taking into account the alien’s danger to self, danger to the community,

and risk of flight.” 8 U.S.C. § 1232(c)(2)(B). In short, the plaintiffs argue that a significant

number of ICE field offices and officers automatically place many age-outs in adult detention

settings without giving less-restrictive settings the consideration required.

In their Amended Complaint, plaintiffs allege that ICE’s failure to consider the least

restrictive placement violates the APA. In Count One, the Plaintiffs argue that it is arbitrary,

capricious, or an abuse of discretion for ICE not to consider placement in the least restrictive

setting. In Count Two, they argue that ICE is unlawfully withholding consideration of placement

in the least restrictive setting and they ask the Court to compel the Agency to undertake such

consideration. The Counts, though legally distinct, challenge the same conduct and both are

focused on what ICE is actually doing with each age-out it encounters. Neither is about what

official policy ICE might have written down. In both Counts, the Plaintiffs are alleging that ICE

is not fulfilling its obligation to actually consider placement in the least restrictive setting for

each age-out that comes into its custody.

The Court conducted a bench trial over the Course of eighteen days between December 2,

2019 and January 15, 2020. Following the trial, the parties submitted proposed findings of fact

and conclusions of law, as well as subsequent briefs in opposition. The Court now makes its

1 These amendments to the TVPRA were made as part of a broader set of amendments to the Violence Against Women Act (“VAWA”). See Violence Against Women Reauthorization Act of 2013, Pub. L. No. 113-4, § 1261, 127 Stat. 54, 56 (codified at 8 U.S.C. § 1232(c)(2)(B)). As a result, the statute governing ICE’s handling of age-outs is sometimes referred to as the TVPRA and sometimes referred to as VAWA.

2 Findings of Fact and Conclusions of law, as required by Rule 52(a)(1) of the Federal Rules of

Civil Procedure.

For the reasons discussed in detail below, the Court will enter judgment in favor of

Plaintiffs. The statute requires that ICE field officers take into account the statutory risk factors

of danger to self, danger to community, and risk of flight, and that they consider placing age-outs

in the least restrictive setting available. To consider placing an age-out in the least restrictive

setting available, ICE officers must be able to identify what available setting would be least

restrictive. This requires making an inquiry into available placements for age-outs that ICE

officers throughout the country frequently do not undertake. ICE headquarters does not train

officers on proper decisionmaking, and in fact gives guidance that is contrary to the statute in

several ways. ICE does not require any number of practices that could facilitate compliance with

the statute, but leaves it up to field officers’ discretion whether, for example, to review age-outs’

files in detail, to contact group homes and shelters, or to respond to communications from age-

outs’ attorneys suggesting settings for them that are less restrictive than adult detention. Many

officers choose not to take these steps, with the result that in many of ICE’s largest field offices,

age-outs are detained nearly automatically. In the most extreme cases, this means that ICE field

officers refuse to release age-outs to organizational sponsors who have said they would be happy

to take them in, see infra ¶ 187, or to eighteen-year-olds’ own parents living in the United States,

infra ¶ 200, when nothing in the age-outs’ records indicated they posed a flight risk or a danger

to themselves or to the public. These are not the decisionmaking processes that Congress

required. By failing to make decisions in the way Congress dictated, and based on the factors

Congress identified as relevant, ICE fails to fulfill its obligations under the statute and therefore

violates the APA.

3 I. BACKGROUND

For clarity in following the Court’s specific findings of fact and conclusions of law, the

Court first provides a brief overview of the facts underlying this case and a summary of the

case’s procedural history and current posture.

A. Factual Overview

Most immigration enforcement functions in the United States are carried out by the DHS,

in which ICE is housed. See 6 U.S.C. §§ 111, 251, 291. Congress established a different legal

framework, however, for the care and custody of “unaccompanied alien children”— defined as

children under age eighteen, who have no lawful immigration status in the United States and no

parent or legal guardian in the United States available to provide care and physical custody. 6

U.S.C. § 279(g)(2). Except in certain exceptional circumstances, unaccompanied minors

apprehended by immigration officials are transferred to the custody of HHS. 8 U.S.C.

§ 1232(b)(3). ORR, an office within a division of HHS, is thereafter responsible for, among

other things, “coordinating and implementing the care and placement” of such children. 6

U.S.C. § 279(a)–(b)(1)(A). Congress has established that these children “shall be promptly

placed in the least restrictive setting that is in the best interest of the child” and that “[i]n making

such placements, the Secretary [of HHS] may consider danger to self, danger to the community,

and risk of flight.” 8 U.S.C.

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