As Khelin Marcano was making ready for her routine scheduled appointment with Immigration and Customs Enforcement in December, she debated packing a bag stuffed with her 1-year-old daughter’s garments. Whereas she and her husband had been attending appointments with out problem, she knew others had been being detained at government buildings by immigration authorities.
“After they advised us we had been being detained, it felt like we already knew, all alongside,” Marcano advised ABC Information.
The household, together with 1-year-old Amalia, was shortly despatched from El Paso to Texas’ Dilley immigration detention middle, the place they had been detained for 60 days — becoming a member of tons of of different households that the federal government has held for durations that advocates say exceed the bounds established by federal courtroom rulings.
These restrictions stem from the Flores Settlement, a 1997 authorized settlement {that a} federal courtroom has interpreted to imply that the federal government typically shouldn’t maintain kids in immigration custody for greater than 20 days.
As of final month, there have been about 1,400 folks being held at Dilley, together with kids and oldsters, based on RAICES, a authorized immigrant advocacy group. The power was closed through the Biden administration and was re-opened final yr because the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown ramped up.
The 60 days that Marcano, her husband Stiven Prieto, and their daughter had been held there’s 3 times the final authorized restrict permitted by the settlement.
“The Trump administration is holding kids and households in detention for extended intervals of time, weeks, months,” Elora Mukherjee, the household’s lawyer, advised ABC Information. “Kids and households on the Dilley facility do not have entry to enough clear ingesting water, the place they do not have entry to enough nutritious meals, [and] do not have entry to satisfactory medical care.
‘Why does this occur to us?’
The household entered the U.S. utilizing the Biden-era Customs and Border Safety app in 2024, based on courtroom paperwork. They had been processed and granted parole to reside within the nation whereas making use of for asylum. The household was launched final week after their 60-day detention and their first courtroom date is scheduled for 2027, based on their legal professional.
A spokesperson for the Division of Homeland Safety stated the household “was launched into the nation beneath the Biden administration,” and confirmed their detention.
“For years, the Flores consent decree has been a software of the left to advertise an open borders agenda,” the DHS spokesperson stated. “It’s lengthy overdue for a single district in California to cease managing the Govt Department’s immigration features. The Trump administration is dedicated to restoring frequent sense to our immigration system.”
Early on throughout their detention, the household says 1-year-old Amalia developed a persistent fever. Marcano advised ABC Information that regardless of her repeated pleas for remedy, the medical workers dismissed the signs.
“The physician advised me that fever was signal as a result of it meant she was actively preventing a virus,” Marcano stated in Spanish. “I acquired actually upset … and advised her that regardless of the case was, a fever just isn’t factor. If she did not know that fever might kill folks, or that fever might trigger convulsions, fever would by no means be good.”
In a habeas petition Marcano filed towards the federal government, she and her legal professional claimed the Dilley facility lacked primary hygiene and diet, and that they noticed bugs within the meals. They alleged that the faucet water smelled so strongly of chlorine that the household spent their restricted funds on bottled water for his or her daughter.
Khelin Marcano, Stiven Prieto and their one-year-old daughter Amalia had been launched from immigration detention this month.
ABC Information
Marcano advised ABC Information that at one level throughout their detention, Amalia appeared to lose her power and collapsed in her arms.
“I grabbed her and I dressed her and I took her again to the clinic, and I started to argue with the medical doctors, asking who can be chargeable for my daughter if one thing occurred to her,” Marcano stated.
Marcano stated it was solely then that workers at Dilley transported her and Amalia by ambulance to a regional hospital, and later to a bigger hospital in San Antonio. The 1-year-old was recognized with COVID-19 and a respiratory virus. based on the household and their habeas petition.
In line with Marcano’s grievance, hospital workers supplied her with a nebulizer and Albuterol to deal with Amalia’s respiratory misery — however once they returned to the Dilley facility, the workers instantly confiscated each the nebulizer and the remedy.
“They took her therapy away,” Marcano stated. “Why does this occur to us if now we have completed every little thing proper? I used to be begging the officers to please assist me get out of there, and nobody listened to me.”
The household was launched collectively shortly after they filed a habeas petition. Marcano advised ABC Information that, whereas inside the power, she met households with pregnant ladies and noticed kids as younger as 2 months previous.
Lengthy-term results
A number of immigrant advocates and attorneys advised ABC Information that the Trump administration is maintaining kids and households who’re in search of asylum and different types of authorized aid in extended detention.
In Minneapolis, the place 5-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos was detained alongside together with his father on their approach house from faculty final month, native faculty officers advised ABC Information that immigration authorities had detained 4 different college students from the district. Certainly one of them, 11-year-old Elizabeth Zuna Caisaguano, was detained alongside along with her mom for multiple month, based on the household’s legal professional, Bobby Painter.
“They had been pulled over by ICE and pulled out of their automotive, thrown on an airplane and despatched to Dilley, all within the span of perhaps 24 hours,” the legal professional stated.
Some households have been held for months, attorneys advised ABC Information.
“The consequences of detention are long-term on kids,” Mukherjee, Marcano’s legal professional, advised ABC Information. “Kids who’re with their mother and father and who’re secure with their mother and father ought to by no means be detained when it is not in a toddler’s greatest curiosity.”

The one-year-old was recognized with COVID-19 and RSV throughout their immigration detention based on a lawsuit.
Lawyer Elora Mukherjee
The DHS, in a press release, stated “being in detention is a alternative.”
“We encourage all mother and father to take management of their departure with the CBP House App,” the spokesperson stated. “The USA is providing unlawful aliens $2,600 and a free flight to self-deport now.”
Since being launched, Marcano stated her daughter hardly cries at evening anymore like she did once they had been on the detention middle.
“We’re feeling superb and thank god for his blessings,” she advised ABC Information. “We’re nonetheless slightly on edge about what we had been planning on doing given every little thing forward. So we’re left right here serious about what’s going to occur to us and that offers us a little bit of worry.”
“Are they going to depart us alone?” Marcano stated. “That is what we hope, however we do not know.”
