Federal court allows ICE to expand expedited deportations nationwide
Summary
A federal appeals court allowed the Department of Homeland Security to expand a fast-track deportation process across the entire U.S. This policy lets immigration officials deport some people without court hearings if they cannot prove they have lived in the country for a certain time.Key Facts
- The court ruled 2-1 in favor of the Trump administration's plan to expand expedited removals nationwide.
- Expedited removal lets officials deport certain immigrants quickly, without a court hearing.
- Previously, this policy only applied near the border and to people who had been in the U.S. for less than two weeks.
- The new rule applies anywhere in the U.S. and to immigrants who cannot show they have lived in the country for more than two years.
- A federal judge had blocked the policy in August 2025, saying it violated legal rights, but the appeals court reversed that decision.
- DHS lawyer James Percival said the ruling supports applying immigration laws as written.
- The Trump administration offers a $2,600 payment and free flights to encourage unauthorized immigrants to leave voluntarily.
- The policy is part of President Donald Trump’s broader effort to reduce illegal immigration.
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