In 1997, CHRCL lead three major nationwide cases. Flores v. Reno set the minimum
standard of living for detained immigrant children in the United States, set CHRCL as the only nongovernmental organization allowed to hold detention centers accountable for these minimum standards, and required the prompt release of detained children to relatives residing in the United States. The Haitian Centre for Human Rights et al. v. United States, a human rights petition addressed to the inter'American commission on human rights of the
Organization of American States resulting in a decision that the U.S. Haitian interdiction program violated the "right to life" pursuant to the American Declaration Of The Rights and Duties of Man. In 1998, CHRCL served as lead counsel in the nationwide class action,
American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, et al., v.
Anti-Defamation League of the B'nai B'rith, et al. This case terminated the ability for entities to spy on Palestinian political activists. In 2002, CHRCL served as lead counsel in Reno v. Catholic Social Services, which granted over 250,000 immigrants legal status under the 1986 amnesty law. In 2012, CHRCL served as lead counsel in LULAC v. Arizona, which blocked Arizona's state and local government from enforcing federal immigration laws on the federal government's behalf. In 2017, CHRCL won the Flores v Sessions case, which prevented DHS and ICE from separating children from parents in detention centers and limited the timeframe for detention centers to hold immigrant minors. In 2022, CHRCL served as lead counsel on two cases. Lucas R. v. Azar, set the standard, that if an immigrant minor was held in a detention center for more than 30 days, a hearing would need to be held. Flores v. Garland set new minimum standards for detention centers quality of life and requiring a multilayered medical system. ==Programs and Activities==