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CBP, Border Patrol agents from the McAllen station horse patrol unit on patrol on horseback in South Texas.

Photographer: Donna Burton
Photo: U.S. Customs and Border Protection | CC BY-SA 2.0 | Wikimedia Commons

Parents Sue U.S. Over 8‑Year‑Old Honduran Girl’s 2023 Death in CBP Custody

The Honduran parents of 8‑year‑old Anadith Danay Reyes Alvarez have filed a federal wrongful death lawsuit against the U.S. government, alleging Customs and Border Protection failed to provide adequate medical care before she died in custody in South Texas in 2023. Anadith, who had chronic heart problems and sickle cell anemia, was held for eight days in CBP facilities in Donna and Harlingen, where an internal agency investigation later found medical staff did not review documents her mother offered describing the girl’s serious conditions. While detained, she developed flu‑like symptoms, a 104.9°F fever, nausea, breathing troubles and pain; according to the lawsuit, repeated pleas from her mother for hospital care were ignored until the child went limp in her arms. A prior tort claim filed by the family was denied in October 2025, prompting this suit, which seeks unspecified damages for the family’s suffering. DHS did not immediately comment, and the case is likely to intensify longstanding criticism of prolonged detention of medically fragile children at CBP border facilities and the government’s adherence to its own custody standards.

Immigration & Demographic Change Border Enforcement and Detention Civil Rights and Government Accountability

📌 Key Facts

  • Family of 8‑year‑old Honduran girl Anadith Danay Reyes Alvarez filed a wrongful death lawsuit on April 10, 2026 against the U.S. government.
  • The child, who had chronic heart problems and sickle cell anemia, was held eight days in CBP custody in Donna and Harlingen, Texas, in 2023 before dying.
  • An internal CBP investigation found failures in providing proper medical care and that medical personnel did not review medical records her mother tried to provide.
  • While detained, Anandith developed a 104.9°F fever, nausea, breathing difficulties and pain; she was not taken to a hospital until after she went limp in her mother’s arms.
  • A prior tort claim by the family was denied in October 2025; the new lawsuit seeks unspecified damages.

📊 Relevant Data

From January 2010 to March 2026, there have been 78 deaths of minors in encounters with U.S. Customs and Border Protection, out of a total of 367 deaths.

CBP Fatal Encounters Tracker — American Civil Liberties Union of Texas

Key causes of migration from Honduras to the U.S. include poverty, high levels of violence, corruption, political instability, and climate-related disasters such as hurricanes.

Central American Migration: Root Causes and U.S. Policy — Congressional Research Service

In Latin America, the prevalence of sickle cell disease varies, with Brazil having the highest at 1 in 1000 births, while overall in Hispanic American populations in the U.S., it is about 1 in 16,300 births.

global overview of SCD: populations, policy limitations, and future directions — Oxford Academic Journal of Sickle Cell Disease

Afro-Hondurans make up approximately 1-2% of Honduras's population.

Afro-Hondurans — Wikipedia

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