When a person suspected of a crime is arrested without a warrant, the Fourth Amendment guarantees that freedom may not be taken away except upon a neutral magistrate judge’s prompt confirmation that probable cause exists that this person in fact committed the crime. In contrast, in the deportation process, a person is often detained for weeks before a judge determines that the noncitizen is actually deportable, thus justifying detention. Even the separate procedures available to review custody do not suffice because the mandatory detention statute renders many detainees ineligible for review by a judge. If they are entitled to a bond hearing, the presumption is detention, and the detainee must bear the burden of proving he is not a dange...
Recent statutory changes to United States immigration law have resulted in a large increase in the n...
Immigration judges routinely use police reports to make life-altering decisions in noncitizens’ live...
The common conception of a constitutionally sufficient warrant is one reflecting a judicial determin...
When a person suspected of a crime is arrested without a warrant, the Fourth Amendment guarantees th...
Scholars, immigration judges, attorneys, and congressional committees have been calling for a truly ...
Today, an immigrant green card holder mandatorily detained pending his removal proceedings, without ...
In this Article, I seek to demonstrate the radical consequences that taking due process seriously wo...
Since 1996, the Immigration and Nationality Act has required the government to take into custody ind...
In Padilla v. Kentucky, the U.S. Supreme Court held that defense attorneys have a Sixth Amendment du...
Although ICE\u27s shackling practices vary across the country, in at least some jurisdictions ICE ha...
Thousands of long-term legal permanent residents are deported from the United States each year becau...
President Trump, during his campaign, promised a “deportation task force” to swiftly deport the elev...
In this essay, I argue that immigration judges should regain discretion over deportation cases invol...
This Article examines several recent legislative proposals to streamline deportation proceedings and...
A removal hearing in immigration court focuses on two predominant issues—whether the noncitizen is d...
Recent statutory changes to United States immigration law have resulted in a large increase in the n...
Immigration judges routinely use police reports to make life-altering decisions in noncitizens’ live...
The common conception of a constitutionally sufficient warrant is one reflecting a judicial determin...
When a person suspected of a crime is arrested without a warrant, the Fourth Amendment guarantees th...
Scholars, immigration judges, attorneys, and congressional committees have been calling for a truly ...
Today, an immigrant green card holder mandatorily detained pending his removal proceedings, without ...
In this Article, I seek to demonstrate the radical consequences that taking due process seriously wo...
Since 1996, the Immigration and Nationality Act has required the government to take into custody ind...
In Padilla v. Kentucky, the U.S. Supreme Court held that defense attorneys have a Sixth Amendment du...
Although ICE\u27s shackling practices vary across the country, in at least some jurisdictions ICE ha...
Thousands of long-term legal permanent residents are deported from the United States each year becau...
President Trump, during his campaign, promised a “deportation task force” to swiftly deport the elev...
In this essay, I argue that immigration judges should regain discretion over deportation cases invol...
This Article examines several recent legislative proposals to streamline deportation proceedings and...
A removal hearing in immigration court focuses on two predominant issues—whether the noncitizen is d...
Recent statutory changes to United States immigration law have resulted in a large increase in the n...
Immigration judges routinely use police reports to make life-altering decisions in noncitizens’ live...
The common conception of a constitutionally sufficient warrant is one reflecting a judicial determin...