Trump Administration Faces Lawsuit Over ICE Arrests at Immigration Courts in 2025:
The Trump administration is facing a high-profile class-action lawsuit over a contentious policy that purportedly permitted U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to hold detainees during immigration court hearings, in violation of due process and constitutional rights.
The complaint claims that the Department of Justice (DOJ) and Department of Homeland Security (DHS) colluded to use immigration courts as enforcement areas.
It was filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia on July 16, 2025.
Following their court hearings, plaintiffs, including asylum seekers escaping persecution, allege they were imprisoned or deported right away.
In the hopes of being protected, many of the claimants had complied with their immigration procedures legally.
Instead, ICE agents, frequently without access to legal counsel, waited outside courtrooms to greet them under this Trump-era deportation tactic.
According to Jordan Wells, a civil rights lawyer for the plaintiffs, “it is a violation of American values to turn courtrooms into traps for people seeking justice.”
For vulnerable populations like LGBTQ+ people, who faced accelerated deportation, the policy was especially destructive.
According to reports, one Ecuadorian man was deported in less than 30 days because he feared persecution in his native country.
Legal experts contend that the Fifth Amendment, which protects due process and fair hearings, is violated by the policy.
Critics claim that the Trump administration compromised judicial integrity and endangered lives by essentially circumventing court protections.
The plaintiffs want the court to:
Declare the immigration courts’ ICE arrest policy to be invalid.
Restore court attendees’ legal protections
Stop all deportations using the fast-track associated with this program.
This case is seen as a historic legal issue that has the potential to reshape the relationship between immigration enforcement and fundamental civil rights in the US.
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