Minors fleeing violence in their countries of origin constitute a significant portion of asylum seekers in the United States. Medical and mental health professionals provide continuity care services and offer pro bono forensic evaluations for this population to document evidence of human rights abuses and torture. The present study included a retrospective, qualitative chart review of deidentified personal declarations and clinician medico-legal affidavits associated with 36 asylum seekers under 21 years of age. Data were analyzed through a modified consensual qualified research (CQR-M) approach to identify patterns in these individuals' reports of persecution and assess health outcomes. Among the cases studied, violence by organized criminal groups (47.2%), family-based violence (44.4%), and gender-based violence (44.4%) were the most commonly cited reasons minors sought asylum. Evaluators documented a wide range of psychological sequelae: 80.5% of minors presented with clinically significant symptoms associated with trauma-and stressor-related disorders, depression, and/or anxiety at the time of their applications for asylum. Of note, almost three-quarters of the minors reported current enrollment in school and two-thirds reported factors related to adaptive functioning. Despite reported exposure to premigratory and migratory trauma, postmigratory stressors, and psychological sequelae related to their experiences of violence, these young asylum seekers exhibited signs of resilience and a range of health-promoting strengths. Children and adolescents fleeing their countries of origin to escape persecution constitute a significant portion of the refugee population (Boehner et al., 2014). According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR, 2018), of 25.9 million refugees worldwide, over half are under 18 years of age. This is consistent with migration patterns in the United States, where three out of seven refugees admitted in 2017 were younger than 18 years old (UNHCR, 2019). In particular, the United States has experienced a steady increase in asylees from the nations of El Salvador, Honduras, and Guatemala since 2011 (UNHCR, 2014), with unaccompanied children comprising a sizable segment of these migrants (UN-HCR, 2019). Furthermore, the number of children and families taken into U.S. Customs and Border Protection custody along the border between the United States and Mexico border increased dramatically between 2018 and 2019, with a 60% increase in the number of unaccompanied minors and a 406% increase in families (Mosaad, 2019; U.S. Customs and Border Protection, 2019).