

 
Unaccompanied Alien Children: An Overview 
Lisa Seghetti 
Section Research Manager 
Alison Siskin 
Specialist in Immigration Policy 
Ruth Ellen Wasem 
Specialist in Immigration Policy 
June 23, 2014 
Congressional Research Service 
7-5700 
www.crs.gov 
R43599 
 
Unaccompanied Alien Children: An Overview 
 
Summary 
The number of unaccompanied alien children (UAC) arriving in the United States has reached 
alarming numbers that has strain the system put in place over the past decade to handle such 
cases. UAC are defined in statute as children who lack lawful immigration status in the United 
States, who are under the age of 18, and who are without a parent or legal guardian in the United 
States or no parent or legal guardian in the United States is available to provide care and physical 
custody. Two statutes and a legal settlement most directly affect U.S. policy for the treatment and 
administrative processing of UAC: the Flores Settlement Agreement of 1997; the Homeland 
Security Act of 2002; and the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2008. 
Several agencies in the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the Department of Health 
and Human Services’ (HHS) Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) share responsibilities for the 
processing, treatment, and placement of UAC. DHS Customs and Border Protection apprehends 
and detains UAC arrested at the border while Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) 
handles the transfer and repatriation responsibilities. ICE also apprehends UAC in the interior of 
the country and is responsible for representing the government in removal proceedings. HHS is 
responsible for coordinating and implementing the care and placement of UAC in appropriate 
custody. 
Four countries account for almost all of the UAC cases (El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and 
Mexico) and much of the recent increase has come from El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras. 
In FY2009, Mexican UAC accounted for 82% of 19,668 UAC apprehensions, while the other 
three Central American countries accounted for 17%. By the first eight months of FY2014, the 
proportions had almost reversed, with Mexican UAC comprising only 25% of the 47,017 UAC 
apprehensions, and UAC from the three Central American countries comprising 73%.  
Both the Administration and Congress have begun to take action to respond to the surge in UAC 
coming across the border. The Administration has developed a working group to coordinate the 
efforts of the various agencies involved in responding to the issue. It also has opened additional 
shelters and holding facilities to accommodate the large number of UAC apprehended at the 
border. The Administration has also announced plans to provide funding to the affected Central 
American countries for a variety of programs and security-related initiatives. Relatedly, Congress 
is considering funding increases for HHS and DHS.  
 
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Unaccompanied Alien Children: An Overview 
 
Contents 
Background ...................................................................................................................................... 1 
Scope of the Problem ....................................................................................................................... 2 
Current Policy .................................................................................................................................. 3 
Processing and Treatment of UAC Apprehended ............................................................................ 4 
Customs and Border Protection ................................................................................................. 4 
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) .......................................................................... 6 
Office of Refugee Resettlement Program .................................................................................. 8 
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services .............................................................................  10 
The Executive Office of Immigration Review ........................................................................ 10 
Administrative and Congressional Action ..................................................................................... 11 
Administrative Action ............................................................................................................. 11 
Congressional Action ............................................................................................................... 13 
Policy Challenges .......................................................................................................................... 13 
 
Figures 
Figure 1. UAC Apprehensions by Country of Origin, FY2008-FY2014......................................... 2 
Figure 2. UACs in ORR Custody, October 2008 through May 2014 .............................................. 9 
 
Contacts 
Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 14 
 
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Unaccompanied Alien Children: An Overview 
 
Background 
There has been a large increase in the number of unaccompanied alien children (UAC) 
apprehended along the Southwest boarder, which has placed a strain on several agencies and their 
resources. During a recent hearing on the topic, Congressional members, like the Administration, 
characterized the issue as a humanitarian crisis.1 Overwhelmingly the children are coming from 
three Central American countries,2 and Mexico. They are reportedly coming for economic 
opportunities, escaping violence in their home countries, and to be reunited with parents or other 
family members who are living in the United States.3 Critics of the Obama Administration, 
however, assert that the recent surge in UAC fleeing their home countries is due to a perception of 
relaxed U.S. immigration policy towards children.4 
Unaccompanied alien5 children (UAC) are defined in statute as children who lack lawful 
immigration status in the United States,6 are under the age of 18, are without a parent or legal 
guardian in the United States, or no parent or legal guardian in the United States is available to 
provide care and physical custody.7 They most often arrive at United States ports of entry or are 
apprehended along the southwestern border with Mexico. Less frequently they are apprehended 
in the interior and determined to be a juvenile8 and unaccompanied.9 Although most of these 
children are aged 14 or older, recently there has been an increase in the apprehension of UAC 
under the age of 13.10 
The report opens with an analysis of the data of the recent surge in UAC crossing the border. It 
then discusses current policy on the treatment, care, and custody of the population. The 
                                                 
1 Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on Oversight of the Department of Homeland Security, June 11, 2014. 
Hereinafter referred to as Senate oversight hearing. 
2 Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador. 
3 Cecilia Muñoz, the White House Director of Domestic Policy Council, “Press Call Regarding the Establishment of the 
Inter-Agency Unified Coordination Group on Unaccompanied Alien Children,” press release, June 3, 2014.  
4 Most commonly these critics cite the Border Security, Economic Opportunity, and Immigration Modernization Act 
(S. 744), passed by the Senate in 2013, which would allow certain unlawfully present aliens to adjust to a lawful 
immigration status; and the administrative policy entitled Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), which 
grants certain aliens who arrived in the United States prior to a certain period as children some protection from removal 
for at least two years. For an example of these arguments, see U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on the Judiciary, 
Oversight of the Department of Homeland Security, 113th Cong., 2nd sess., June 11, 2014. For a discussion of S. 744, 
see CRS Report R43099, Comprehensive Immigration Reform in the 113th Congress: Short Summary of Senate-Passed 
S. 744, by Ruth Ellen Wasem. For a discussion of DACA, see CRS Report RL33863, Unauthorized Alien Students: 
Issues and “DREAM Act” Legislation, by Andorra Bruno. 
5 Alien, a technical term appearing throughout the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), refers to a foreign national 
who is not a citizen or national of the United States.  
6 The child may have illegally entered the country or been legally admitted but overstayed length of admittance (i.e., a 
visa overstay.) 
7 6 U.S.C. §279(g)(2). 
8 A juvenile is defined as an alien under the age of 18. 8 CFR §263.3. In this report, the terms “juvenile,” “child,” and 
“minor” are used interchangeably.  
9 A juvenile is classified as unaccompanied if neither a parent nor a legal guardian is with the juvenile alien at the time 
of apprehension, or within a geographical proximity to quickly provide care for the juvenile. 8 CFR §236.3(b)(1).  
10 White House, Departments of Homeland Security and Health and Human Services, “Press Call Regarding the 
Establishment of the Inter-Agency Unified Coordination Group on Unaccompanied Alien Children,” press release, 
June 3, 2014. 
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processing and treatment of UAC is detailed, with a discussion of each agency that is involved 
with the population. The report then discusses both Administrative and Congressional action to 
deal with the current crisis. As this issue is still emerging, the report concludes with a series of 
questions related to UAC that remain unanswered.  
Scope of the Problem 
Overall, the number of UAC apprehended by the Border Patrol has increased significantly over 
the past five years, and most of the increase comes from three countries: El Salvador, Guatemala, 
and Honduras.11 As of the end of May, the Border Patrol apprehended more UAC than in any of 
the previous five years, and had apprehended almost twice as many UAC as in FY2012.  
According to the Administration, in FY2014 there has been an increase in the number of UAC 
who are girls and the number of UAC who are under the age of 13. Because CRS was unable to 
get data to illustrate this change, it is unclear whether the increase in girls and in children under 
13 in the UAC population is simply because the number of all UAC has increased, or if the 
number of girls and children under 13 has increased as a proportion of all UAC. 
Figure 1. UAC Apprehensions by Country of Origin, FY2008-FY2014 
 
Source: For FY2008-FY2013: U.S. Department of Homeland Security, United States Border Patrol, Juvenile and 
Adult Apprehensions—Fiscal Year 2013. For FY2014, unpublished data provided by Customs and Border 
Protection to CRS. 
Notes: FY2014 figures are October 1, 2013 to May 31, 2014, representing 2/3 of a fiscal year. 
                                                 
11 Over the past three years, there has been an increase in Border Patrol apprehensions of third-country nationals. While 
the number of those apprehended from Mexico decreased slightly (from 286,154 to 267,734), the number of 
apprehended third-country nationals increased almost three-fold from 54,098 to 153,055. 
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Nationals of Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, and Mexico account for almost all 
unaccompanied alien children apprehended at the Mexico-U.S. border, as Figure 1 shows. Flows 
of UAC from Mexico rose substantially in FY2009 and have remained rather steady. UAC from 
Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador account for the surge beginning in FY2012. In FY2009, 
Mexican UAC accounted for 82% of 19,668 UAC apprehensions, while the other three Central 
American countries accounted for 17%. By the first eight months of FY2014, the proportions had 
almost reversed, with Mexican UAC comprising only 25% of the 47,017 UAC apprehensions, 
and UAC from the three Central American countries comprising 73%.  
Current Policy12 
Two laws and a settlement discussed below most directly affect U.S. policy for the treatment and 
administrative processing of UAC: the Flores Settlement Agreement of 1997; the Homeland 
Security Act of 2002; and the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2008. 
During the 1980s, allegations of UAC mistreatment by the former Immigration and 
Naturalization Service (INS)13 caused a series of lawsuits against the government that eventually 
resulted in the Flores Settlement Agreement (Flores Agreement) in 1997.14 The Flores Agreement 
established a nationwide policy for the detention, treatment, and release of UAC and recognized 
the particular vulnerability of UAC while detained without a parent or legal guardian present.15 It 
required that immigration officials detaining minors provide (1) food and drinking water; (2) 
medical assistance in emergencies; (3) toilets and sinks; (4) adequate temperature control and 
ventilation; (5) adequate supervision to protect minors from others; and (6) separation from 
unrelated adults whenever possible. For several years following the Flores Agreement, criticism 
continued over whether the INS had fully implemented the regulations that had been drafted.16  
Five years later, the Homeland Security Act of 2002 (HSA; P.L. 107-296) divided responsibilities 
for the processing and treatment of UAC between the newly created Department of Homeland 
Security (DHS) and the Department of Health and Human Services’ (HHS) Office of Refugee 
Resettlement (ORR). The HSA assigned apprehension, transfer, and repatriation responsibilities 
to DHS. To HHS, the law assigned responsibility for coordinating and implementing the care and 
placement of UAC in appropriate custody; reunifying UAC with their parents abroad if 
appropriate; maintaining and publishing a list of legal services available to UAC; and collecting 
statistical information on UAC, among other things.17 The HSA also established a statutory 
definition of UAC as unauthorized minors without the accompaniment of a parent or legal 
guardian. Despite these developments, criticism that the Flores Agreement had not been fully 
implemented continued. 
                                                 
12 William Kandel, Analyst in Immigration Policy, contributed to this section. 
13 The Homeland Security Act of 2002 abolished the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) and its functions 
were split in the Departments of Homeland Security, Justice and Health and Human Services.  
14 Flores v. Meese—Stipulated Settlement Agreement (U.S. District Court, Central District of California, 1997).  
15 See DHS Office of Inspector General, CBP’s Handling of Unaccompanied Alien Children, OIG-10-117, 
Washington, DC, September 2010.  
16 See U.S. Department of Justice, Office of the Inspector General, Unaccompanied Juveniles in INS Custody, 
Executive Summary, Report no. I-2001-009, September 28, 2001.  
17 ORR assumed care of UAC on March 1, 2003, and created the Division of Unaccompanied Children’s Services 
(DUCS) for addressing the requirements of this population. P.L. 107-296, Section 462.  
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In response to ongoing concerns that UAC who were apprehended by the Border Patrol were not 
being adequately screened to see if there were a reason that they should not be returned to their 
home country, Congress passed the William Wilberforce Trafficking Victims Protection 
Reauthorization Act of 2008 (TVPRA, P.L. 110-457). The TVPRA directed the Secretary of DHS, 
in conjunction with other federal agencies, to develop policies and procedures to ensure that UAC 
in the United States are safely repatriated to their country of nationality or of last habitual 
residence. The section set forth special rules for UAC from contiguous countries (i.e., Mexico and 
Canada), allowing such children, under certain circumstances, to return to Mexico or Canada 
without additional penalties, and directing the Secretary of State to negotiate agreements with 
Mexico and Canada to manage the repatriation process. Unaccompanied alien children from 
countries other than Mexico or Canada—along with UAC from those countries who are 
apprehended away from the border—are to be transferred to the care and custody of the 
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and placed in formal removal proceedings. 
The TVPRA requires that children from contiguous countries be screened within 48 hours of 
being apprehended to determine whether they should be returned to their country or transferred to 
HHS and placed in removal proceedings. 
Processing and Treatment of UAC Apprehended  
Several DHS agencies are involved in apprehending, processing, and repatriating UAC, while the 
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is responsible for the care and custody of 
UAC. The Executive Office of Immigration Review (EOIR) in the U.S. Department of Justice 
conducts the immigration removal proceedings. 
Customs and Border Protection (CBP) apprehends, processes, and detains the majority of UAC 
arrested along U.S. borders. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) physically transports 
UAC from CBP to HHS Office of Refugee Resettlement (HHS-ORR) custody. HHS-ORR is 
responsible for detaining and sheltering UAC who are from non-contiguous countries and those 
from contiguous countries (i.e., Canada and Mexico) for whom there is a concern that they may 
be victims of trafficking or have an asylum claim, while they await an immigration hearing. U.S. 
Citizenship and Immigration Services is responsible for the initial adjudication of asylum 
applications filed by UAC. The Executive Office of Immigration Review (EOIR) in the U.S. 
Department of Justice conducts the immigration proceedings that determine whether the UAC is 
allowed to remain in the United States or is deported to his or her home country. If a UAC is 
ordered removed from the United States, ICE is responsible for returning the alien to his/her 
home country. The following sections discuss the role of these federal agencies in apprehending, 
processing, detaining, and repatriating UAC. 
Customs and Border Protection 
The Office of Border Patrol (OBP)18 and the Office of Field Operations (OFO)19 are responsible 
for apprehending and processing UAC that come through a port of entry (POE) or are found at or 
                                                 
18 OBP includes the Border Patrol. OBP and the Border Patrol are used interchangeably throughout this section. 
19 The OFO oversees the CBP Officers who provide inspections of travelers and goods that come through a port of 
entry. 
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near the border.20 UAC that are apprehended between POEs are transported to Border Patrol 
stations, and if they are apprehended at POEs, they are escorted to CBP secondary screening 
areas. In both cases, when CBP confirms that juveniles have entered the country illegally and 
unaccompanied, they are considered UAC and processed for immigration violations, and the 
appropriate consulate is notified that the juvenile is being detained by DHS. 
The Border Patrol apprehends the majority of UAC at or near the border. They also process 
UAC.21 With the exception of Mexican and Canadian UAC who meet a set of criteria discussed 
below, the Border Patrol has to turn UAC over to ICE for transport to HHS-ORR within 72 
hours.22 Up until 2008, the Border Patrol, as a matter of policy and practice, returned Mexican 
UAC to Mexico under voluntary departure.23 Under this practice, Mexican UAC were removed 
through the nearest POE and turned over to a Mexican official within twenty-four hours and 
during daylight. 
As mentioned, the TVPRA required the Secretary of Homeland Security, in conjunction with the 
Secretary of State, the Attorney General, and the Secretary of HHS, to develop policies and 
procedures to ensure that UAC are safely repatriated to their country of nationality or last habitual 
residence. Of particular significance, the TVPRA required CBP to follow certain criteria for UAC 
that are nationals or habitual residents from a contiguous country (i.e., Canada and Mexico). In 
these cases, within 48 hours CBP personnel must screen the UAC to determine the following: 
•  that the UAC has not been a victim of a severe form of trafficking in persons and 
that there is no credible evidence that the minor is at risk should the minor be 
returned to his country of nationality or of last habitual residence; 
•  that the UAC does not have a possible claim to asylum; and 
•  that the UAC is able to make an independent decision to voluntarily return to his 
country of nationality or of last habitual residence.24 
If, after assessing the UAC, CBP personnel determine the minor to be inadmissible under the 
Immigration and Nationality Act,25 they can permit the minor to withdraw his application for 
admission26 through voluntary departure and return the minor to his country of nationality or of 
last habitual residence. 
                                                 
20 When both OBP and OFO are referenced in this section, “CBP” is used. 
21 The processing of UAC includes gathering biographic information such as their name and age as well as their 
citizenship and whether they are unaccompanied. Border Patrol agents also collect biometrics on UAC and query 
relevant immigration, terrorist, and criminal databases. 
22 The 72-hour time period was established in statute by the TVPRA. 
23 Voluntary departure is a form of discretionary relief that may be offered to certain aliens in lieu of being subject to 
formal removal proceedings. Aliens accepting an offer of voluntary departure are not inadmissible in the future under 
INA §212(a)(9). When granted by the border patrol, the procedure is usually referred to as “voluntary return.” 
24 P.L. 110-457, §235(a)(2)(A). 
25 8 U.S.C. §1101 et seq. Although the screening provision only applies to UAC from contiguous countries, in March 
2009 DHS issued a policy that, in essence, made the screening provisions applicable to all UAC. U.S. Congress, Senate 
Committee on the Judiciary, “Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act: Renewing the Commitment to 
Victims of Human Trafficking,” testimony of Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary Kelly Ryan, September 13, 2011. 
26 In this case, the UAC is permitted to return immediately to Mexico or Canada, and does not face administrative or 
other penalties. 8 U.S.C. §1225(a)(4). 
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The TVPRA contains a number of specific safeguards for the treatment of UAC while in the care 
and custody of CBP and it also provides guidance for CBP personnel on returning a minor to his 
country of nationality or of last habitual residence. It also requires the Secretary of State to 
negotiate agreements with the contiguous countries with respect to the repatriation of their UAC. 
The agreements would serve as a protection from trafficking and, at minimum, are required to 
include provisions pertaining to (1) the hand-off of the minor children to an appropriate 
government official; (2) a prohibition against returning UAC outside of “reasonable business 
hours”; and (3) a requirement that the border personnel of the contiguous countries be trained in 
the terms of the agreements. 
As mentioned, UAC apprehended by the Border Patrol are brought to a Border Patrol facility 
where they are processed. In 2008, the agency issued a memorandum entitled “Hold Rooms and 
Short Term Custody.”27 Since the issuance of this policy, non-governmental organizations 
(NGOs) have criticized the Border Patrol for failing to fully uphold the provisions in current law 
and the Flores Agreement.28 Indeed, the DHS Office of Inspector General (OIG) issued a report in 
2010 that concluded while CBP was in general compliance with the Flores Agreement it needed 
to make improvements in certain areas with respect to its handling of UAC.  
The 2010 OIG report, however, did not address whether OBP was in compliance with the 
TVPRA. As highlighted above, the TVPRA requires CBP personnel to screen UAC from 
contiguous countries for severe forms of trafficking in persons and for fear of persecution if they 
are returned to their country of nationality or last habitual residence. At least one NGO that 
conducted a two-year study on UAC29 asserted in its report that OBP doesn’t adequately do this 
nor do they have training in place for their Border Patrol agents.30 
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) 
ICE is responsible for the physical transfer of UAC from CBP to HHS-ORR. Additionally, ICE 
may apprehend UAC in the interior during immigration enforcement actions. ICE is also 
responsible for representing the government in removal procedures before EOIR. Unaccompanied 
alien children who are not subject to TVPRA’s special repatriation procedures for certain children 
from Mexico or Canada (i.e., voluntary departure) may be placed in standard removal 
proceedings pursuant to INA §240. The TVPRA specifies that UAC in standard removal 
proceedings also are eligible to be granted voluntary departure under INA §240B at no cost to the 
child. The TVPRA requires that HHS ensure, to the greatest extent possible, that UAC have 
                                                 
27 UAC are held in “hold rooms” at Border Patrol stations. The 2008 memorandum, which is publically available but 
redacted, outlines agency policy on the care and treatment of individuals in CBP care and custody. See U.S. Customs 
and Border Patrol, Memorandum on “Hold Rooms and Short Term Custody,” June 2, 2008, http://foiarr.cbp.gov/
streamingWord.asp?i=378.  
28 See for example, Children at the Border: The Screening, Protection and Repatriation of Unaccompanied Mexican 
Minors, by Betsy Cavendish and Maru Cortazar, Appleseed, Washington DC, 2011. Hereinafter referred to as Children 
at the Border. 
29 See Children at the Border. 
30 Relatedly, the 2010 OIG study was unable to determine whether CBP personnel had sufficient training to comply 
with the provisions in the Flores Agreement. Notably, the Appleseed study (Children at the Border) included site visits 
to ten Border Patrol facilities as well as site visits to locales in Mexico and interviews with government officials in both 
countries and minors in custody and who have been repatriated. Whether this limited site visit sample is sufficiently 
varied to be adequately generalizable to all Border Patrol facilities on the U.S.-Mexico border is unclear. 
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access to legal counsel; and statute also permits HHS to appoint independent child advocates for 
child trafficking victims and other vulnerable unaccompanied alien children. 
ICE is also responsible for the physical removal of all foreign nationals, including UAC, who 
have final orders of removal or who have elected voluntary departure while in removal 
proceedings. To safeguard the welfare of all UAC, ICE has established policies for repatriating 
UAC. The policies include: 
•  returning the UAC only during daylight hours; 
•  recording the transfer by making sure that the receiving government official or 
designee signs for custody; 
•  returning the UAC through a port designated for repatriation; 
•  providing the UAC the opportunity to communicate with a consular official prior 
to departure for the home country; and  
•  preserving the unity of families during removal.31 
ICE notifies the country of every foreign national being removed from the Unites States.32 The 
ability to affect a removal order is dependent on the ability of the U.S. government to secure 
travel documents for the alien being removed from the country in question.33 As a result, the 
United States is dependent on the willingness of foreign governments to accept the return of their 
nationals. Each country sets documentary requirements for repatriation of their nationals.34 While 
some countries allow ICE to use a valid passport to remove an alien (if the alien is in possession 
of one), other countries require ICE to obtain a travel document specifically for the repatriation.35 
According to one report, the process of obtaining travel documents can become problematic 
because countries often change their documentary requirements or raise objections to the return 
of a juvenile.36 
Once the foreign country has issued travel documents, ICE arranges transport of the UAC and, if 
flying, accompanies the UAC on the flight to their home country. The majority of ICE’s UAC 
removals are conducted by commercial airlines. ICE provides two escort officers for each UAC.37 
Mexican UAC are repatriated in accordance with Local Repatriation Agreements (LRA), which 
                                                 
31 Email from ICE Congressional Relations, May 16, 2014. 
32 A country clearance is the process by which ICE notifies a foreign country, through the U.S. Embassy abroad, that a 
foreign national is being repatriated. Additionally, when an alien is being escorted by ICE personnel, the country 
clearance process is used to notify the U.S. Ambassador abroad that U.S. government employees will be travelling to 
the country.  
33 Conversation with Doug Henkel, Associate Director, ICE Removal and Management Division, February 20, 2012. 
34 Depending on the country and depending on where the UAC is housed, the consular officers will conduct in-person 
or phone interviews. Olga Byrne and Elise Miller, The Flow of Unaccompanied Children Through the Immigration 
System, Vera Institute of Justice, Washington, DC, March 2012, p. 27. 
35 Annex 9 of the Civil Aviation Convention requires that countries issue travel documents, but the convention lacks an 
enforcement mechanism.  
36 Olga Byrne and Elise Miller, The Flow of Unaccompanied Children Through the Immigration System, Vera Institute 
of Justice, Washington, DC, March 2012, p. 27. 
37 An additional officer is added for each group that exceeds five UAC. The gender of the officers corresponds to the 
gender of the children being repatriated. Email from ICE Congressional Relations, May 16, 2014. 
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require notification of the Mexican Consulate for each UAC repatriated. Additional specific 
requirements apply to each LRA (e.g., specific hours of repatriation).38  
Office of Refugee Resettlement Program39  
The Unaccompanied Alien Children Program in ORR/HHS provides for the custody and care of 
unaccompanied alien minors who have been apprehended by ICE or CBP or referred by other 
federal agencies. The Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act (TVPRA) of 2008, 
which made significant reforms to policies on UAC, directed that HHS ensure that the UAC “be 
promptly placed in the least restrictive setting that is in the best interest of the child.”40 The HSA 
requires that ORR develop a plan to ensure the timely appointment of legal counsel for each 
UAC, ensure that the interests of the child are considered in decisions and actions relating to the 
care and custody of a UAC, and oversee the infrastructure and personnel of UAC residential 
facilities, among other responsibilities.41 ORR also screens the UAC to determine if the child has 
been a victim of a severe form of trafficking in persons, if there is credible evidence that the 
minor is at risk should the minor be returned to his or her country of nationality or of last habitual 
residence, and if the UAC has a possible claim to asylum. 
ORR arranges to house the child either in one of its shelters or in a foster care situation; or the 
UAC program reunites the child with a family member. The Flores Agreement outlines the 
following preference ranking for sponsor types: (1) a parent; (2) a legal guardian; (3) an adult 
relative; (4) an adult individual or entity designated by the child’s parent or legal guardian; (5) a 
licensed program willing to accept legal custody; or (6) an adult or entity approved by ORR.42 
According to ORR, the majority of the youth are cared for through a network of state-licensed 
ORR-funded care providers that provide classroom education; mental and medical health 
services; case management; and socialization and recreation. The state-licensed ORR-funded care 
providers also facilitate the UAC release to family members or other sponsors who are able to 
care for them.43  
In making these placement determinations, ORR conducts a background investigation to ensure 
the identity of the adult assuming legal guardianship for the UAC and that the adult does not have 
a record of abusive behavior. ORR may consult with the consulate of the UAC’s country of origin 
as well as interview the UAC to ensure they also agree with the proposed placement. If such 
background checks reveal evidence of actual or potential abuse or trafficking, ORR may require a 
home study as an additional precaution.44 In addition, the parent or guardian is required to 
                                                 
38 Ibid. 
39 William Kandel, Analyst in Immigration Policy, contributed to this section. 
40 §§235(a)-235(d) of TVPRA; 8 U.S.C. §1232(b)(2). 
41 Section 235(c) of the TVPRA and Section 462(b) of the Homeland Security Act of 2002 (HSA, P.L. 107-296) 
describe conditions for the care and placement of UAC in federal custody. 
42 Flores v. Reno Stipulated Settlement Agreement, 1997, p.10. 
43 Administration for Children and Families, Office of Refugee Resettlement, Unaccompanied Alien Children Program, 
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Fact Sheet, May 2014, http://www.acf.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/orr/
unaccompanied_childrens_services_fact_sheet.pdf. (Hereinafter ORR UAC Fact Sheet, May 2014.) 
44 Pursuant to the TVPRA of 2008, home studies are required for certain UAC considered especially vulnerable. 
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complete a Parent Reunification Packet to attest that they agree to take responsibility for the UAC 
and provide him or her with proper care.45  
A juvenile may be held in a secure facility only if he or she is charged with criminal or delinquent 
actions; threatens or commits violence; displays unacceptably disruptive conduct in a shelter; 
presents an escape risk; is in danger and is detained for their own safety; or is part of an 
emergency or influx of minors that results in insufficient bed space at non-secure facilities.46 
Of the children served, ORR reports that ultimately about 85% are reunified with their families.47 
Between FY2008 and FY2010, the length of stay in ORR care averaged 61 days, and total time in 
custody ranged from less than one day to 710 days.48 In a May 2014 fact sheet, ORR reported: 
“The average length of stay in the program is currently near 35 days.”49 It is important to note that 
removal proceedings continue even when UAC are placed with parents or other relatives. 
Figure 2. UACs in ORR Custody, October 2008 through May 2014 
Monthy Referrals 
 
Source: CRS presentation of unpublished data from the Office of Refugee Resettlement. 
 
                                                 
45 Office of Refugee Resettlement, Unaccompanied Children’s Services, ORR/DCS Family Reunification Packet for 
Sponsors (English/Español), http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/orr/resource/unaccompanied-childrens-
services#Family%20Reunification%20Packet%20for%20Sponsors. 
46 Center for Human Rights & Constitutional Law, Flores v. Meese: Final Text of Settlement Establishing Minimum 
Standards and Conditions for Housing and Release of Juveniles in INS Custody, Exhibit 2 (1997). 
47 ORR UAC Fact Sheet, May 2014. 
48 Vera Institute Study, p. 17. 
49 ORR UAC Fact Sheet, May 2014. 
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Figure 2 uses monthly referrals to ORR to illustrate the trends over time and shows a sharp 
increase in UAC in ORR custody over the past year. Monthly referrals were less than 1,000 until 
March 2012. By March 2013, monthly referrals to ORR surpassed 2,000 UAC cases, and the 
number hit 5,527 in March 2014. In May 2014, 9,500 UAC were transferred to ORR. Bear in 
mind that not all UAC are referred to ORR; for example, some arriving from contiguous countries 
voluntarily return home.  
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services 
As mentioned, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) is responsible for the initial 
adjudication of asylum applications filed by UAC. If either CBP or ICE find that the child is a 
UAC and transfer the child to ORR custody, USCIS will generally take jurisdiction over the 
asylum application, even where there may be some evidence that the child reunited with a parent 
or legal guardian after CBP or ICE made the UAC determination. In addition, USCIS has initial 
jurisdiction over asylum applications filed by UACs with pending claims in immigration court, 
with a case on appeal before the Board of Immigration Appeals, or with a petition for review with 
a federal court as of the date of enactment of the TVPRA (December 23, 2008). The UAC must 
appear at any hearings scheduled in immigration court even after he or she has filed for asylum 
with USCIS. 
The Executive Office of Immigration Review 
The U.S. Department of Justice Executive Office of Immigration Review (EOIR) is responsible 
for adjudicating immigration cases, including removal proceedings. Generally, during an 
immigration removal proceeding, the foreign national and the U.S. government present testimony 
so that the immigration judge can make a determination on whether the foreign national is 
removable or qualifies for some type of relief from removal (i.e., the alien is permitted to remain 
in the United States either permanently or temporarily.)  
EOIR has specific policies for conducting the removal hearings of UAC to ensure that UAC 
understand the nature of the proceedings, can effectively present evidence about their cases, and 
have appropriate assistance. The policy guidelines discuss possible adjustments to create “an 
atmosphere in which the child is better able to present a claim and to participate more fully in the 
proceedings.” Under these guidelines, the immigration judges are supposed to:  
•  establish special dockets for UAC so that they are separated from the general 
population;  
•  allow child-friendly courtroom modifications (e.g., judges not wearing robes, 
allowing the child to have a toy, permitting child to testify from a seat rather than 
the witness stand, allowing more breaks during the proceedings);  
•  provide courtroom orientations to familiarize the children with the court;  
•  explain the proceedings at the outset;  
•  prepare the child to testify; and  
•  employ child-sensitive questioning.  
Under policy, immigration judges should strongly encourage the use of pro bono legal 
representation if the child is not represented.  
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Administrative and Congressional Action 
Both the Administration and Congress have begun to take action to respond to the surge in UAC 
coming across the border. The Administration has developed a working group to coordinate the 
efforts of the various agencies involved in responding to the issue. It also has opened additional 
shelters and holding facilities to accommodate the large number of UAC apprehended at the 
border. Relatedly, Congress is considering funding increases for HHS/ORR and DHS/CBP.  
Administrative Action 
The Administration developed a Unified Coordination Group that is comprised of representatives 
from all of the relevant agencies involved in responding to this issue.50 Federal Emergency 
Management Agency (FEMA) Administrator Craig Fugate was named as the Federal 
Coordinating Official, and will be coordinating the federal response to the UAC issue.51 
Reportedly, the Unified Coordination Group is looking at the large increase in UAC from an 
incident management perspective. Administrator Fugate’s role is to support the lead agencies, 
CBP and HHS, by bringing in capacity from throughout the federal government so that the lead 
agencies can focus on their missions.52 
Reportedly, CBP will maintain primary responsibility for border security operations at and 
between ports of entry and, working with ICE, provide for the proper care of unaccompanied 
children when they are temporarily in DHS custody.53 DHS will continue to coordinate closely 
with the Departments of Health and Human Services, State, and Defense, the General Services 
Administration, and other agencies, to ensure a coordinated and fast response within the United 
States in the short term, and in the longer term to work with the sending countries to undertake 
reforms to address the causes behind the recent migration trends.54 DHS is also currently working 
with the Central American countries on a public education campaign to dissuade UAC from 
attempting to migrate illegally to the United States.55 
To deal with the current influx of UAC, HHS/ORR has made use of a network of group homes 
operated by nonprofit organizations in Texas and other parts of country. These nonprofit 
organizations have experience providing the types of services that UAC need (e.g., medical, 
                                                 
50 Department of Homeland Security, “Statement by Secretary Johnson on Increased Influx of Unaccompanied 
Immigrant Children at the Border,” press release, June 2, 2014, http://www.dhs.gov/news/2014/06/02/statement-
secretary-johnson-increased-influx-unaccompanied-immigrant-children-border. 
51 Alejandro Mayorkas, Deputy Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, “Press Call Regarding the 
Establishment of the Inter-Agency Unified Coordination Group on Unaccompanied Alien Children,” press release, 
June 3, 2014. 
52 Craig Fugate, Federal Coordinating Administration of the Inter-Agency Unified Coordination Group on UAC, “Press 
Call Regarding the Establishment of the Inter-Agency Unified Coordination Group on Unaccompanied Alien 
Children,” press release, June 3, 2014.  
53 ICE is also focusing on dismantling the smuggling organizations who are smuggling UAC into the United States.  
54 Department of Homeland Security, “Statement by Secretary Johnson on Increased Influx of Unaccompanied 
Immigrant Children at the Border,” press release, June 2, 2014, http://www.dhs.gov/news/2014/06/02/statement-
secretary-johnson-increased-influx-unaccompanied-immigrant-children-border.  
55 Alejandro Mayorkas, Deputy Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, “Press Call Regarding the 
Establishment of the Inter-Agency Unified Coordination Group on Unaccompanied Alien Children,” press release, 
June 3, 2014.  
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nutritional, educational). In addition, HHS has reached out to the Department of Defense (DOD) 
for additional assistance in housing UAC. DOD has made facilities available in Lackland Air 
Force Base in San Antonio, TX, and at Naval Base Ventura County in Oxnard, CA. The Lackland 
facility can hold 1,200 UAC and had 1,000 UAC as of June 3, 2014. The facility in Ventura can 
hold 600 UAC and was expected to begin operations on June 6, 2014. According to a press report, 
these facilities are only supposed to be temporary and are not intended to remain open for more 
than 120 days.56 
In addition to the aforementioned efforts, the Corporation for National and Community Service 
(CNCS), which administers AmeriCorps,57 and the Department of Justice EOIR have created 
“Justice AmeriCorps.” Justice AmeriCorps is a grant program that will enroll approximately 100 
lawyers and paralegals as AmeriCorps members to provide legal representation to UAC during 
removal proceedings.58  
On June 20, 2014, the Administration announced additional efforts it is taking to address this 
issue. In its “Fact Sheet: Unaccompanied Children from Central America,” the Administration 
noted that it has partnered with its Central American counterparts in three key areas: “combating 
gang violence and strengthening citizen security, spurring economic development, and improving 
capacity to receive and reintegrate returned families and children.” (Security and economic issues 
are believed to be contributing “push” factors that has led to the massive out migration from 
Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador.) In the fact sheet, the Administration announced 
assistance it will be providing to Guatemala, Honduras, and/or El Salvador to provide support in 
the areas of reintegration and repatriation of their citizens, to improve security, to provide 
economic and educational opportunities and anti-gang and crime prevention programs, and to 
promote “peace, security, stabilization, and other related rule of law programs.”59 The 
Administration has collaborated with the other Central American governments on campaigns to 
inform would-be migrants of the danger of relying on human smuggling networks and on 
reinforcing that recently arriving children will not benefit from current Administrative policies60 
or pending legislation.61 The Administration also announced that it has “enhanced enforcement 
and removal proceedings.”  
                                                 
56 Leslie Berestein Rojas, “Emergency Shelter for Unaccompanied Migrant Kids Opening in Ventura County,” 89.3 
KPCC, Southern California Public Radio, June 5, 2014, http://www.scpr.org/blogs/multiamerican/2014/06/05/16777/
emergency-shelter-for-unaccompanied-migrant-kids-o/.  
57 For more information on the CNCS and AmeriCorps, see CRS Report RL33931, The Corporation for National and 
Community Service: Overview of Programs and Funding, by Abigail B. Rudman and Benjamin Collins.  
58 Department of Justice and the Corporation for National and Community Service, “Justice Department and CNCS 
Announce New Partnership to Enhance Immigration Courts and Provide Critical Legal Assistance to Unaccompanied 
Minors,” press release, June 6, 2014, http://www.nationalservice.gov/newsroom/press-releases/2014/justice-
department-and-cncs-announce-new-partnership-enhance. 
59 The Administration also announced additional funding for ongoing bilateral assistance to the three countries for a 
variety of programs. “Fact Sheet: Unaccompanied Children from Central America,” http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-
press-office/2014/06/20/fact-sheet-unaccompanied-children-central-america. 
60 For example, the administrative policy entitled Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) grants certain aliens 
who arrived in the United States prior to a certain period as children some protection from removal for at least two 
years. 
61 For example, the Border Security, Economic Opportunity, and Immigration Modernization Act (S. 744) as passed by 
the Senate would allow certain unlawfully present aliens to adjust to a lawful immigration status. 
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Congressional Action 
In the President’s FY2015 budget for the various agencies responsible for the UAC population 
(i.e., specifically in HHS/ORR and DHS budgets), there wasn’t a request for funding increases to 
help address what has been characterized as a strain on agency resources.62  
The FY2015 President’s budget request for the HHS/ORR program was originally $868 million, 
which is the same amount that was appropriated in FY2014. However, on May 30, 2014, the 
Office of Management and Budget updated its cost projections related to the UAC crisis and 
requested a total of $2.28 billion for FY2015 for the UAC program in the Office of Refugee 
Resettlement.  
The Senate Committee on Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor, Health, and Human Services, 
and Education and Related Agencies approved the Department of Labor, Health, and Human 
Services, and Education and Related Agencies FY2015 draft appropriations bill on June 10, 2014. 
With respect to the UAC program, the subcommittee recommended $1.94 billion, which is $34 
million less than the Administration’s amended request and a more than $1 billion increase over 
FY2014 levels. The subcommittee noted the fluidity of the issue and recommended an expansion 
of HHS transfer authority “to respond to sudden or urgent needs in the future.”63 
For DHS agencies, the Administration’s amended request included an additional $166 million for 
“CBP overtime, contract services for care and support of UAC, and transportation costs.”64 
Previously, DHS appropriators criticized the Administration for not requesting additional funding 
to deal with the crisis;65 and on June 10, 2014, the House Committee on Appropriations approved 
the Administration’s amended request of $166 million above the budget request.66  
Policy Challenges 
The Administration has recently announced an initiative that is aimed at unifying efforts among 
the various agencies charged with UAC responsibilities, and Congress is considering increasing 
appropriations for the various agencies involved. These efforts, however, are geared toward 
responding to the immediate crisis, and there is no way to know whether the numbers of UAC 
will decrease, increase or level off over the long run. Also, although there is speculation about 
what is causing the increase in UAC attempting to illegally enter the United States, there is no 
clear answer to the root causes. A clearer understanding of the factors that make up the “push-
                                                 
62 While the Administration did not request an increase in FY2015 funding for the HHS/ORR UAC program, in its 
FY2014 budget request the Administration requested a $192 million increase and received an almost $492 million 
increase over the FY2013 levels. 
63 See Untied States Senate Committee on Appropriations, “FY15 LHHS Subcommittee Markup Bill Summary,” June 
10, 2014. 
64 Executive Office of the President Office of Management and Budget memo to Representative Nita Lowey, May 30, 
2014. 
65 See House Subcommittee on DHS Appropriations markup on April 2, 2014, and House Appropriations Committee 
markup of the DHS appropriations bill on June 10, 2014. 
66 Previously, the House Subcommittee on DHS Appropriations approved $77 million above the budget request for ICE 
transportation costs. 
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pull” of this extraordinary migration will aid the Administration and Congress in framing the 
most effective policy responses.  
In addition, it is unknown how many of these children will qualify for asylum or other forms of 
immigration relief that may allow them to remain in the United States, or if many of them will be 
returned to their home countries. If, as some observers have noted, many of the UAC have family 
in the United States, and many of those family members, in turn, are not legally present, it raises 
thorny policy questions. Not only does it hinge on what is in the “best interests of the child,” it 
also hinges on what is permissible under the Immigration and Nationality Act and other relevant 
laws. 
 
Author Contact Information 
 
Lisa Seghetti 
  Ruth Ellen Wasem 
Section Research Manager 
Specialist in Immigration Policy 
lseghetti@crs.loc.gov, 7-4669 
rwasem@crs.loc.gov, 7-7342 
Alison Siskin 
   
Specialist in Immigration Policy 
asiskin@crs.loc.gov, 7-0260 
 
 
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