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How Supreme Court Move Could Upend Indefinite ICE Detentions

How Supreme Court Move Could Upend Indefinite ICE Detentions

Summary

The U.S. Supreme Court will decide if immigrants with criminal records can be held in federal custody for long periods without a bond hearing. This case challenges whether the Constitution limits how long immigration authorities can detain someone without reviewing their case individually.

Key Facts

  • The Court agreed to hear an appeal from President Donald Trump’s administration on June 15, 2026.
  • The case involves immigrants with criminal histories detained without bond hearings during deportation proceedings.
  • Current federal law requires detention of certain immigrants with specified criminal records while their removal cases proceed.
  • The legal issue is whether constitutional due process limits how long these immigrants can be held without a hearing.
  • One immigrant was held for seven months, another for 21 months without bond hearings.
  • The Supreme Court did not settle this constitutional question in its 2018 Jennings v. Rodriguez ruling.
  • The dispute reflects a balance between immigrant rights to challenge detention and public safety concerns.
  • Possible outcomes include reaffirming current detention rules, imposing new limits, or setting a compromise approach.
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