Trump, of detention and Supreme Court
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Newsweek spoke to six experts after the Supreme Court agreed to hear a major challenge to prolonged ICE detention.
The Supreme Court agreed Monday to weigh in on the issue of whether some immigrants with criminal records can be detained indefinitely. The court accepted a case, Genalo v. Black, from New York state
About 330,000 Haitians and Syrian across the country, including in Massachusetts, have temporary protected status that could end under the court ruling.
The case the Supreme Court granted review for on Monday focuses on the detention of lawful permanent residents.
The justices agreed to decide whether some detainees eventually have due process rights.
Miguel Raudes of Northridge is in ICE custody at Adelanto as the DHS seeks a third-country removal despite a 2023 ruling protecting him from deportation to Nicaragua.
The Supreme Court on Monday agreed to decide if the government may hold noncitizens in detention for prolonged periods without a bond hearing, a case that could have significant implications for the Trump administration’s crackdown on immigration.
District court judges have ordered bond hearings or the release of ICE detainees more than 1,200 times since the appeals court’s ruling, a POLITICO analysis shows.
