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Migrant Children Removed From New York Shelter After Abuse Allegations

April 18, 2026
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Migrant Children Removed From New York Shelter After Abuse Allegations

Federal officials have moved migrant children and adolescents out of a shelter in Westchester County, N.Y., after receiving reports that detainees there had been mistreated.

The allegations of abuse at a facility run by the Children’s Village, a shelter operator in Dobbs Ferry, were first reported by CNN on Thursday. The Department of Health and Human Services said in a statement to The New York Times that it was aware of the abuse claims and, as a result, transferred unaccompanied children to other locations and notified investigators.

An audit of the facility was completed on Jan. 20, and the children were removed from the facility the next week. Unaccompanied migrant children are the responsibility of the Office of Refugee Resettlement, known as O.R.R., within the Health and Human Services Department.

“The safety and well-being of children in O.R.R. care is a top priority,” Andrew Nixon, a D.H.S. spokesman, said in a statement. “Any credible concerns are addressed swiftly and thoroughly.”

A lawyer who had visited the facility said that children who had been detained there had been punished with restraints and seclusion. Leecia Welch, the chief legal counsel at Children’s Rights, a nonprofit organization that represents children in government custody, said that adolescents had complained about being placed alone for days in what they described as a “red room.”

“There’s just no question kids have been harmed,” Ms. Welch said. “Children’s behaviors continue to worsen the longer they are detained in these facilities, and these types of harmful practices create a perfect storm for them to get seriously injured.”

Christopher Rucas, a spokesman for the Children’s Village, which was founded in 1851 to care for children legally removed from their parents, said that the allegations were distressing.

“We have zero tolerance for any form of punishment,” Mr. Rucas said in a statement. “All teens in our care deserve the highest level of care, support and professionalism from every adult responsible for their well-being.”

The New York State Justice Center for the Protection of People with Special Needs, a state agency, had received complaints about the shelter and said that it was investigating them. The agency declined to comment further.

The Children’s Village has several facilities across New York, and unaccompanied migrant children have stayed there since 2004. The organization tries to find relatives or suitable sponsors who can care for children until their immigration hearings. The Children’s Village offers help to children struggling with mental health problems, and it receives funding from the federal government.

Ana Ley is a Times reporter covering immigration in New York City.

The post Migrant Children Removed From New York Shelter After Abuse Allegations appeared first on New York Times.

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