A divided panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has endorsed the Trump administration's reinterpretation of a 1996 immigration law, allowing mandatory detention without bond for unauthorized immigrants already in the United States. The 2-1 decision, issued on a recent Friday, applies to Texas, Louisiana, and Mississippi, advancing plans for large-scale detention facilities. This ruling supports the administration's mass deportation efforts amid ongoing legal challenges.
The decision from the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals marks a significant development in the Trump administration's immigration enforcement strategy. In a 2-1 ruling, judges Edith Jones and Kyle Duncan approved the government's revised interpretation of the 1996 immigration statute, which had previously distinguished between migrants seeking admission at the border and those already present in the country. Under the new view, unauthorized immigrants who entered without legal admission are treated as still "seeking admission," subjecting them to mandatory detention without the option for bond release.
This policy shift, announced by the administration in July, has led to a surge in detentions by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). ProPublica reports that noncitizens filed more habeas petitions in the last 13 months than during the previous three administrations combined. Federal judges have largely rejected the government's position, with at least 360 judges denying it in over 3,000 cases. For instance, Judge Thomas E. Johnston, appointed by George W. Bush, described the administration's theory as "dystopian absurdity" and criticized efforts to redefine the law.
The ruling enables ICE to expand detention operations in the three states covered by the 5th Circuit. It aligns with plans to convert warehouses into facilities capable of holding up to 10,000 immigrants each, with more than a quarter of proposed sites in this jurisdiction. Aaron Reichlin-Melnick of the American Immigration Council noted that this legal authority complements the physical infrastructure needed for mass deportation. Judge Dana Douglas dissented, warning that "the border is now everywhere."
The approximately 11 million immigrants without permanent legal status in the U.S. could face heightened risks under this regime, particularly as ICE has been acquiring properties above market value for conversion. While the Supreme Court may review the issue, the decision strengthens enforcement in the region for now.