The Trump administration is running into a wall of resistance in the courts over itsnew deportation tactics, racking up over 10,000 legal defeats. Federal judges are stepping in to declare the recent surge in ICE detentions unlawful, pushing back against a core piece of the president's immigration agenda.
This legal showdown has completely changed how the Justice Department and the courts interact. It's also throwing lives into chaos all over the country. Communities are struggling with harsh rules that lock people up without even giving them a chance to defend themselves.
This whole clash goes back to a memo acting ICE Director Todd Lyons sent out on July 8, 2025. The new rule relabeled millions of long-term residents as people "seeking admission," which meant they had to be locked up. Before this change, only people caught right at the border faced this kind of strict label.
With that sudden shift,immigration judges lost their usual power to grant bond. It pushed millions of people straight into a system where they do not even get an initial hearing. Courts were subsequently inundated with lawsuits from detainees seeking immediate release.
Data shows the administration lost nearly 10,400 decided cases while prevailing in roughly 1,200. Over 425 judges, including a majority appointed by President Trump, reached identical conclusions regarding these detentions. The Justice Department subsequently recruited inexperienced lawyers to manage the surging caseload.
Government attorneys frequently face impossible positions when ICE ignores direct judicial orders. 'Despite hundreds of similar rulings in this and other courts resoundingly in favor of the ICE-detainee petitioners, ICE continues to act contrary to law, to spend taxpayer money needlessly, and to waste the scarce resources of the judiciary,' noted US District Judge Harvey Bartle III.
Judges express profound alarm overcontroversial methods used to enforce this detention mandate. Agents have arrested parents dropping off schoolchildren, waited in courthouses to detain individuals after hearings, and seized people previously promised legal protection.
Many judges struggle to find words adequate for their mounting frustration. One judge described the situation as 'an assault on the constitutional order.' US District Judge Gary Brown noted that 'this isn't how things are supposed to work in America,' adding that 'unquestionably, the laws of human decency condemn such villainy.'
Federal judges have ruled that over 10,000 ICE detentions were illegal.That’s roughly 90% of all cases.pic.twitter.com/zPKobDAXHc
Despite widespread district-level losses, the administration remains highly confident about vindication on appeal. White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson maintained that 'the law clearly requires detention of aliens pending their removal from the United States,' while officials dismiss these courtroom defeats as the work of 'judicial activists.'
Source: International Business Times UK