ProBAR’s Spring 2026 Newsletter!

Children Belong With Their Families, and ProBAR is Fighting to Bring Them Home

by Lauren Fisher Flores, ProBAR Legal Director

As Spring blooms, our team celebrates the resilience and strength we see in our clients. As we continue to fight to reunify children with their families, we bear witness to the costs of prolonged detention, the joy of families reunited, and the resilience of children. No one better embodies resilience than the children ProBAR serves. With your support, we will be able to continue our zealous advocacy on their behalf.

In 2025, the average time a child spent detained by ORR skyrocketed from 37 days to over 200—nearly 8 months’ time—and this has taken an undeniable toll. We know of one young client who accrued reports of misbehavior for hugging staff at the shelter where she was detained. Another child said she was tired of being with strangers and not around the people who love her, and that she was slowly losing hope she would ever be released. “As countless months went by, I lost it. I lost myself,” she said. “I lost who I was and who I wanted to be. I couldn’t handle being there for another day.”

This separation takes a toll on parents as well. Every time families think they are close to reunification, the finish line moves just out of reach; rules change from one day to the next, weeks turn to months, and many families lose hope. One child’s father told us while his son was detained he “woke up in the middle of the night all the time, thinking about what I could do to have my child with me again, because I knew that he was not well in that place.” 
Meanwhile, mounting challenges continue for children who are detained. Last fall, they were taken from their beds and packed onto a plane overnight. When that failed, they were convinced and coerced into giving up their rights. Over the winter holidays—three months—not a single child in detention was reunified. Now, children are being offered money to leave, rushed through court proceedings in what we call “rocket dockets”, and forced to make decisions alone in court, all in the name of safety.

Nonetheless, ProBAR has been there each step of the way to advocate, bear witness, and amplify the voices of children for the federal courts to hear. With so many avenues to relief blocked, our team has also turned to federal litigation to fight prolonged detention of children.

We believe children belong with their families, and we fight every day to bring them home. One three-year-old client was separated from her mother at the border and detained for 5 months. Within 2 days of ProBAR filing a habeas petition, she was on a plane to her father. (Pictured right)

ProBAR has now won the release of seven child clients. One mother noticed that the look her child’s eyes had when she was detained was slowly fading, saying “her happy eyes are finally coming back.” Seven children, back in the arms of their families, schools, teachers, and communities.

Thanks to your support, we can continue to fight for the rights of detained children.

ProBAR presente.

ProBAR’s Social Work Team: Empowering Clients Through Human Connection & Access to Services

by Humberto Padilla, Multimedia Specialist

When a fire consumed the home of a local immigrant family late one night in December 2025, Ana Carrera, a social worker with ProBAR, was among the first to respond to the emergency.  

Read the full story here to learn more about the incredible work of ProBAR’s Social Work team.

A Letter from Meredith Linsky, Director of the ABA's Commission on Immigration

by Meredith Linsky, Director of the ABA's Commission on Immigration

Last week, I had the privilege of traveling with ABA President-elect Barbara Howard to visit ProBAR, a long-standing ABA legal services program in Harlingen, Texas. President-elect Howard came away inspired by ProBAR staff and moved by the clients and advocates she met there.”


Read Meredith’s letter here and watch the full video of her conversation with President-Elect Howard here.

ProBAR's Community Team Continues to Meet the Moment

Pictured: members of ProBAR's Community Team and staff from the Mexican Consulate in Brownsville.

ProBAR’s Community Team is dedicated to bridging the gaps between our services and the Rio Grande Valley of South Texas, and more recently, helping ProBAR meet the moment at a time when public access to knowledge and resources about immigration is in high demand and short supply. 

Read the full story here to see how ProBAR’s Community team is helping bring critical information to those who need it most.

 

 ProBAR Presente. 

ProBAR Adelante.

ProBAR Siempre.