Federal Courts/Jurisdiction

Federal Courts/Jurisdiction

Federal Judge Says DHS Must Keep Its Promise to Protect Children in Immigration Detention

Federal Judge Says DHS Must Keep Its Promise to Protect Children in Immigration Detention

A federal judge on Friday blocked the Trump administration’s attempts to significantly undo the Flores Settlement Agreement, which mandates certain protections for children held in immigration detention. The changes to the settlement would have allowed the administration to hold immigrant children and their parents indefinitely in jail-like settings. Federal Judge… Read More

Federal Judge Blocks the Expansion of Fast-Track Deportation Program, Expedited Removal

Federal Judge Blocks the Expansion of Fast-Track Deportation Program, Expedited Removal

A federal judge blocked the expansion of a fast-track deportation program, known as “expedited removal,” minutes before the government said it would begin implementing its expansion on September 28, 2019. Expedited removal allows the government to deport certain people without basic legal protections. Those who are… Read More

DOJ Moves to Further Politicize Immigration Court System

DOJ Moves to Further Politicize Immigration Court System

The Trump administration implemented more drastic changes to the U.S. immigration court system on Monday. A new rule gives the director of the Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR)—a Trump political appointee—the power to adjudicate cases and appeals. Described as a “wolf in sheep’s clothing,” the rule turns the immigration… Read More

Federal Court Rules Detained Immigrant Children Must Receive Clean Water, Edible Food, and Soap

Federal Court Rules Detained Immigrant Children Must Receive Clean Water, Edible Food, and Soap

A federal appeals court in California ruled on Thursday that immigrant children must receive edible food, clean water, soap, and toothpaste while being detained by U.S. immigration authorities. The decision came from a three-judge panel for the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco. The panel dismissed the Trump… Read More

Trump Administration’s Plan to Subject Hundreds of Thousands to Fast-Track Deportations Faces New Lawsuit

Trump Administration’s Plan to Subject Hundreds of Thousands to Fast-Track Deportations Faces New Lawsuit

The Trump administration recently announced it would start applying a fast-tracked deportation process known as “expedited removal” to hundreds of thousands more people than ever before. People across the United States could be deported within hours of being picked up by immigration officers, with no opportunity to see a judge… Read More

California Judge Blocks Implementation of Trump’s New Asylum Rule

California Judge Blocks Implementation of Trump’s New Asylum Rule

A federal judge in California blocked the implementation of a new rule yesterday that would have prevented most immigrants who arrive at the U.S. southern land border from qualifying for asylum in the United States. This decision came just hours after a D.C. court ruled in the opposite direction. The… Read More

Census Bureau Asked 250,000 Households About Their Citizenship Status, Despite Court Ruling

Census Bureau Asked 250,000 Households About Their Citizenship Status, Despite Court Ruling

Despite losing at the Supreme Court, the Trump administration still managed to ask nearly a quarter of a million U.S. households about the citizenship status of their household members. That’s because the administration had already started mailing out its 2019 Census Test—a nationwide test used to inform the upcoming 2020… Read More

A New EOIR Rule Expands Powers of the Board of Immigration Appeals and Attorney General

A New EOIR Rule Expands Powers of the Board of Immigration Appeals and Attorney General

The Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR) issued a final rule last week that expands the authority of the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) and Attorney General William Barr when reviewing an immigration judge’s decision following a removal proceeding. The BIA reviews an immigration judge’s decision if ether the individual… Read More

What Happens to Dreamers Now That the Supreme Court Is Hearing the DACA Case?

What Happens to Dreamers Now That the Supreme Court Is Hearing the DACA Case?

After months of speculation, last week the Supreme Court agreed to review three cases challenging the Trump administration’s decision to end Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA). The Court is expected to issue its decision by June 2020, coming in the midst of the presidential race. In the meantime,… Read More

Supreme Court Rules Against Citizenship Question on 2020 Census

Supreme Court Rules Against Citizenship Question on 2020 Census

In a rebuke to the Trump administration, the Supreme Court ruled against adding a question on citizenship to the 2020 U.S. Census form—for now. Critics feared the question may discourage immigrant, mixed-status, and minority households from participating in the Census, resulting in widespread undercounting and dramatic shifts in political representation. Read More

Make a contribution

Make a direct impact on the lives of immigrants.

logoimg