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SENATE DEMOCRATS DEMAND TRUMP ADMINISTRATION STOP BLOCKING UNDOCUMENTED MINORS’ ACCESS TO REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH CARE


Disturbing Reports Find Trump Officials Personally Denying Abortions To Undocumented, Pregnant Teens

 

In New Letter, Senate Democrats Call On Trump Administration To Immediately Cease “Unprecedented” Interference; Request Immediate Briefing, All Related Documents, Correspondence From Acting HHS Director   

 

More On Case Involving Undocumented Teen In Texas Currently Being Held By Trump Administration—LINK 

 

Senate Democrats: We Have A Moral And Legal Obligation To Ensure These Youth Are Protected & Treated Humanely

 

(Washington, D.C.) – Senator Patty Murray (D-WA), Ranking Member of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee, joined by Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-CA), Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), and Senator Bob Menendez (D-NJ), today called on Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Acting Secretary Eric D. Hargan to immediately cease all undue and improper interference in the health care decisions of young women in the Unaccompanied Alien Children (UAC) Program. According to recent press reports, federal officials within the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR), under the Trump Administration’s HHS Department, have repeatedly tried to intervene to prevent young women in their custody from making their own reproductive health care decisions.

 

A young woman in Texas, Jane Doe, currently in the physical custody of ORR, was prevented from obtaining an abortion, despite having obtained a judicial waiver as required by state law, and securing her own funding and transportation for the care. A federal judge entered a Temporary Restraining Order on October 18, requiring that ORR ensure “promptly and without delay” the young woman’s access to transportation to obtain an abortion. The Trump Administration has appealed that decision and a hearing is scheduled for today.

 

“We write to ask you to immediately cease all undue and improper interference in the health care decisions of young women who have been identified as Unaccompanied Alien Children (“UAC”) or who are otherwise undocumented and in the physical custody of the federal government. These young women often face unimaginable trauma and danger in coming to this country and fleeing violent situations in their home countries,” wrote the Senators. “Rather than personally interfering with health care decisions, ORR facilities and staff should be facilitating access to health care for those in the government’s custody, including any UAC that has experienced sexual assault…Forcing a young woman, especially one who has been sexually assaulted, to continue a pregnancy against her will exacerbates the trauma she has already experienced.”  

 

Press reports have indicated that ORR has taken several actions to stop multiple women from having access to proper medical care by controlling the type of clinic they could attend, not allowing them to have transportation to medical facilities, preventing them from speaking with a lawyer, threatening funding of the shelters, and actively trying to counsel young women not to have abortions. High level officials at ORR, including Director Scott Lloyd and Deputy Director Kenneth Tota, took the unprecedented and inappropriate action of personally contacting the women to deter them from having abortions.

 

Senators are requesting an immediate briefing and further information from HHS no later than October 31st, 2017 on:

 

  1. The current ORR policy regarding the provision of medical services, including abortion access, to minors in ORR custody, including any changes since January 20, 2017 to Section 3.4: Medical Services in the ORR Guide for Children Entering the United States Unaccompanied, and any other section pertaining to medical care for minors in ORR custody.

 

  1. Memoranda, guidance, and all documents assessing the legality of any changes since January 20, 2017, which affect the provision of medical services, including abortion access, to minors in ORR custody.

 

  1. The current ORR policy regarding informing parents or guardians of UACs of pregnancy or a decision to seek an abortion.

 

  1. The current ORR policy regarding counseling services for UACs who are seeking abortion care, including the criteria for selecting counseling providers, any directive from ORR regarding the content of counseling, and, specifically, any policy requiring mandatory visits to so-called “crisis pregnancy centers.”

 

  1. All correspondence to and from former Acting ORR Director Kenneth Tota and ORR Director Scott Lloyd with ORR staff, and shelter provider staff regarding pregnancy, reproductive health, emergency contraception, or related medical care for UACs within ORR custody, including correspondence in which Mr. Tota or Mr. Lloyd inquired about or directed health care decisions for individual patients.

 

  1. All current memoranda, guidance, and documents assessing the compliance of all ORR facilities housing UACs with federal law requiring emergency health care services. 

 

  1. All current memoranda, guidance, and documents assessing ORR’s compliance with the Flores v. Reno settlement agreement, including its obligation to provide family planning services.

 

  1. All current memoranda, guidance, and documents assessing ORR’s compliance with the 2014 interim final rule on “Standards to Prevent, Detect, and Respond to Sexual Abuse and Sexual Harassment Involving Unaccompanied Children.”

 

Full text of the letter below and PDF HERE.

 

October 19, 2017

 

 

The Honorable Eric D. Hargan

Acting Secretary

Department of Health and Human Services

200 Independence Avenue, S.W.

Washington, D.C. 20201

 

 

Dear Acting Secretary Hargan,

 

We write to ask you to immediately cease all undue and improper interference in the health care decisions of young women who have been identified as Unaccompanied Alien Children (“UAC”) or who are otherwise undocumented and in the physical custody of the federal government. These young women often face unimaginable trauma and danger in coming to this country and fleeing violent situations in their home countries.  The United States has a moral and legal obligation to ensure that these youth are protected from harm and treated humanely. Reports that the Office of Refugee Resettlement (“ORR”), within the Department of Health and Human Services (“the Department”), is interfering with these young women’s ability to obtain legal health care are deeply disturbing.

 

According to recent press reports, federal officials within ORR have repeatedly tried to intervene to prevent young women in ORR custody from making their own reproductive health care decisions.[1] A young woman in Texas, Jane Doe, currently in the physical custody of ORR, was prevented from obtaining an abortion, despite having obtained a judicial waiver as required by state law, and securing her own funding and transportation for the care.

 

While Jane Doe’s case is being considered, we understand her treatment by your agency was not an isolated incident. Since the beginning of the Trump Administration, two ORR directors have tried on multiple occasions to stop young women from obtaining abortions.[2]  ORR Deputy Director Kenneth Tota, who served as the Office’s Acting Director prior to Lloyd’s appointment, reportedly tried to stop a medication abortion already in progress.[3] 

 

Current ORR Director Scott Lloyd, who was appointed to the position in late March 2017 and has no medical background, has personally intervened to dissuade young women from having abortions.[4]  Press reports indicate Mr. Lloyd personally ordered ORR staff to prevent a young woman from speaking with her attorneys and has threatened to withdraw funding from shelters that fail to comply with his directives.[5] Allegedly, Mr. Lloyd also directly advised shelter staff that he could get involved in placing a pregnant young woman with a different family than her relative sponsor if things got “dicey” with her continuing the pregnancy.[6] 

 

ORR is charged with the care of unaccompanied children under federal law and must comply with the legal obligations under the Flores Agreement.  The use of these coercive tactics is unacceptable and raises significant concerns about whether the federal government is unlawfully blocking pregnant youth from obtaining legal reproductive health care services in violation of the Flores Agreement and possibly the Fourth Amendment. 

 

Additionally, the lack of transparency and accountability in carrying out a change in headquarters and field operations is startling.  These actions appear to completely flout the Department’s current written practices and give the appearance that the Department is violating federal law.  For instance, ORR Guide: Children Entering the United States Unaccompanied (“ORR Guide”), states, “ORR has developed its health care policies with the goals of ensuring the children’s physical and mental well-being.”[7]  Specifically, the ORR Guide states the program provides the following services: “Family planning services, including pregnancy tests and comprehensive information about and access to medical reproductive health services and emergency contraception.”  Moreover, reports that federal officials are actively blocking young women from leaving facilities in order to obtain health care, preventing them from speaking with attorneys, and interfering with access to medication are particularly disturbing in light of the high rates of violence, sexual assault, and human trafficking that they experience in the countries they are fleeing,[8] as well as during the dangerous journey to the U.S.[9] 

 

In order to ensure your agency is complying with all applicable federal law and the United States Constitution, we request an immediate briefing on the concerns raised in this letter.  Please also provide the following documents prior to that briefing by no later than October 31, 2017:

 

  1. The current ORR policy regarding the provision of medical services, including abortion access, to minors in ORR custody, including any changes since January 20, 2017 to Section 3.4: Medical Services in the ORR Guide for Children Entering the United States Unaccompanied, and any other section pertaining to medical care for minors in ORR custody.

 

  1. Memoranda, guidance, and all documents assessing the legality of any changes since January 20, 2017, which affect the provision of medical services, including abortion access, to minors in ORR custody.

 

  1. The current ORR policy regarding informing parents or guardians of UACs of pregnancy or a decision to seek an abortion.

 

  1. The current ORR policy regarding counseling services for UACs who are seeking abortion care, including the criteria for selecting counseling providers, any directive from ORR regarding the content of counseling, and, specifically, any policy requiring mandatory visits to so-called “crisis pregnancy centers.”

 

  1. All correspondence to and from former Acting ORR Director Kenneth Tota and ORR Director Scott Lloyd with ORR staff, and shelter provider staff regarding pregnancy, reproductive health, emergency contraception, or related medical care for UACs within ORR custody, including correspondence in which Mr. Tota or Mr. Lloyd inquired about or directed health care decisions for individual patients.

 

  1. All current memoranda, guidance, and documents assessing the compliance of all ORR facilities housing UACs with federal law requiring emergency health care services. 

 

  1. All current memoranda, guidance, and documents assessing ORR’s compliance with the Flores v. Reno settlement agreement, including its obligation to provide family planning services.

 

  1. All current memoranda, guidance, and documents assessing ORR’s compliance with the 2014 interim final rule on “Standards to Prevent, Detect, and Respond to Sexual Abuse and Sexual Harassment Involving Unaccompanied Children.”

 

Rather than personally interfering with health care decisions, ORR facilities and staff should be facilitating access to health care for those in the government’s custody, including any UAC that has experienced sexual assault, and ensuring these children have access to all emergency medical treatment, including emergency contraception and sexually transmitted infections prophylaxis.[10] Forcing a young woman, especially one who has been sexually assaulted, to continue a pregnancy against her will exacerbates the trauma she has already experienced. 

 

Thank you in advance for your prompt attention to this critical matter. If you have any questions, or would like to further discuss compliance with this request, please contact HELP Committee Ranking Member Murray’s counsel, Laurel Sakai, at 202-224-7675 and Judiciary Committee Ranking Member Feinstein’s immigration counsel, Jenn Piatt, at 202-224-9480.

 

###

 



[1] Sarah McMammon, Undocumented Teen Held In Texas Is At The Heart Of An Abortion Fight, NPR, Oct. 13, 2017, available at http://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2017/10/13/557621415/undocumented-teen-held-in-texas-is-at-the-heart-an-abortion-fight

[2] Renuka Rayasam, Trump official halts abortions among undocumented, pregnant teens, Politico, Oct. 16, 2017, available at http://www.politico.com/story/2017/10/16/undocumented-pregnant-girl-trump-abortion-texas-243844

[3] Id.

[4] Maria Sacchetti and Sandhya Somashekhar, An undocumented teen is pregnant and in custody.  Can the U.S. stop her from getting an abortion?, Wash. Post, Oct. 17, 2017, available at https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/immigration/an-undocumented-teen-is-pregnant-and-in-custody-can-the-us-stop-her-from-getting-an-abortion/2017/10/17/6b548cda-b34b-11e7-9e58-e6288544af98_story.html?utm_term=.10e6d7d21314 (quoting an HHS official: “When there’s a child in the program who is pregnant, he has been reaching out to her and trying to help as much as possible with life-affirming options.”).

[5] Renuka Rayasam, Trump official halts abortions among undocumented, pregnant teens, Politico, Oct. 16, 2017, available at http://www.politico.com/story/2017/10/16/undocumented-pregnant-girl-trump-abortion-texas-243844

[6] Id.

[7] ORR Guide:  Children Entering the United States Unaccompanied, Office of Refugee Resettlement, Office of the Administration of Children & Families, Department of Health and Human Services, Jan. 30, 2015, available at  https://www.acf.hhs.gov/orr/resource/children-entering-the-united-states-unaccompanied

[8] Ioan Grillo, A tough road north for Central American children, UNHCR, Dec. 9, 2016, available at http://www.unhcr.org/afr/news/latest/2016/12/583ee5ee4/tough-road-north-central-american-children.html; Testimony of Scott Lloyd stating that 95 percent of Unaccompanied Immigrant Minors arriving in the United States in FY2016 are from Guatemala, Honduras or El Salvador, https://www.judiciary.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/06-21-17%20Lloyd%20Testimony.pdf 

[9] Valeria Luiselli, Riding ‘the beast’: children migrants reveal full horror of their journeys to America, The Guardian, Oct. 5, 2017, available at https://www.theguardian.com/inequality/2017/oct/05/riding-the-beast-child-migrants-reveal-full-horror-of-their-journeys-to-us

[10] 45 CFR 411.92(a)