Passed
HR-4371-119
Received in the Senate.
What it does
This bill would change how the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) places unaccompanied migrant children — minors with no lawful immigration status and no parent or legal guardian in the U.S. — into homes or facilities. It would require HHS to consider a child's danger to self, danger to the community, and flight risk when choosing a placement setting (currently, HHS may consider these factors but is not required to). It would mandate placement in a secure facility for any child 13 or older with gang-related markings, tattoos, or a history of gang-related arrests or criminal conduct. It would also require HHS to collect and share with the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) detailed personal information — including Social Security numbers and immigration status — on all adult household members of a potential sponsor, and would prohibit HHS from placing any child with a sponsor who is unlawfully present in the United States.
Who benefits
U.S. communities where unaccompanied children are placed, if the bill reduces placement of children who pose a safety risk. Sponsors who are lawfully present in the U.S. and would face less competition from unauthorized sponsors. Law enforcement agencies that would receive expanded household data from HHS. Children who might otherwise be placed in unsafe or unsuitable homes. Victims of gang activity who may benefit from tighter screening of gang-affiliated minors.
Who is hurt
Unaccompanied children 13 and older with gang-related markings or history who would be mandatorily placed in secure facilities regardless of individual circumstances. Unauthorized immigrant sponsors — including parents or close relatives — who would be categorically barred from receiving children. Adult household members of potential sponsors whose personal data (including Social Security numbers and immigration status) would be shared with DHS, potentially exposing them to immigration enforcement. Children who might otherwise be reunited with family members who are unauthorized immigrants. Legal aid organizations and child welfare advocates who may face increased caseloads for children unable to be placed with family. Taxpayers who may bear higher costs if more children are held in secure facilities rather than less expensive community placements.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the current system has allowed dangerous individuals — including gang members — to be released into communities with inadequate screening, pointing to high-profile cases such as the murder of Kayla Hamilton, a Maryland teenager killed in 2022 by an MS-13 member who had entered the U.S. as an unaccompanied minor. They contend that making risk factors mandatory considerations — rather than optional ones — closes a loophole that has allowed children with documented gang ties to be placed in community settings, and that requiring full household background information gives DHS the data it needs to prevent children from being funneled to criminal networks or unsafe homes.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that mandatory secure placement based on tattoos or markings — without individualized judicial review — risks incarcerating children who may have been coerced into gangs or who bear markings involuntarily, violating the child welfare principle of least-restrictive placement. They contend that barring all unauthorized sponsors categorically, including parents and close relatives, would leave children in government custody longer and at greater risk of harm, and that sharing household members' immigration data with DHS would deter eligible sponsors from coming forward — an outcome documented after similar information-sharing policies were implemented in 2018 and reversed in 2021.
Passed