West Virginia judge warns officials on illegal ICE detentions

A federal judge in West Virginia has issued a stern warning to officials, stating that continued illegal detentions by Immigration and Customs Enforcement will lead to contempt proceedings and sanctions without qualified immunity. The ruling comes in a habeas corpus case involving Miguel Antonio Dominguez Izaguirre, whose detention was deemed a violation of due process rights. This decision highlights ongoing judicial rejections of the government's interpretation of immigration detention laws.

U.S. District Judge Joseph R. Goodwin, appointed by Bill Clinton, ruled in favor of petitioner Miguel Antonio Dominguez Izaguirre, a Honduran man who entered the United States in 2016 and resides in Cana, Virginia, with his two young U.S. citizen children. Dominguez Izaguirre was arrested by ICE agents on February 14, 2026, while traveling near Summersville, West Virginia, and detained without criminal charges or a custody hearing. His attorneys filed a habeas corpus petition on February 19, 2026, arguing that the detention violated his Fifth Amendment due process rights.

Goodwin ordered the petitioner's immediate release, noting that "Petitioner's due process rights have been violated" and that "immediate release is the only appropriate remedy." This case is part of a broader pattern in the West Virginia federal district, where judges have consistently rejected the Trump administration's claim that ICE can mandatorily detain immigrants under 8 U.S.C. §1225(b), which applies to those seeking entry. Instead, courts have applied 8 U.S.C. §1226(a), governing those already present in the U.S., following interpretations from a 2018 Supreme Court ruling by Justice Samuel Alito.

The opinion highlights that this is the 17th such petition assigned to the court that week, with the government's arguments rejected unanimously in the district—on February 4, twice on February 5, February 9, and February 11, 2026, by four different judges. Goodwin expressed frustration, stating, "Today, the Government continues to wrongfully detain those petitioners without due process," and affirmed that prior rulings are binding.

On February 19, 2026, Goodwin alerted the U.S. Department of Justice that the court would no longer tolerate violations, a message confirmed as received by ICE. The ruling serves as "explicit notice to all officials—state and federal—involved in the detention of individuals whose cases come before this court." Continued detentions without individualized custody determinations will trigger consequences, including contempt proceedings and monetary sanctions for federal officials, and personal civil liability without qualified immunity for state jail officials. Goodwin concluded, "This court will enforce the Constitution."

These developments align with nationwide habeas corpus relief granted to detained immigrants challenging the administration's novel reading of the Immigration and Nationality Act over the past eight months.

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U.S. District Judge Brian E. Murphy in courtroom, gavel down on documents blocking Trump deportation policy, symbolic relieved immigrants foreground.
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Federal judge blocks Trump administration’s third-country deportation policy, citing due process

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U.S. District Judge Brian E. Murphy of Massachusetts, an appointee of former President Joe Biden, ruled on February 25, 2026, that the Trump administration’s policy of deporting some immigrants to countries other than their own is unlawful because it does not provide sufficient due process protections, including meaningful notice and an opportunity to raise fears of persecution or torture.

A federal judge in Nevada has ruled that ICE imposed unlawful coercive conditions on Kevin Eliel Aguirre Solis, a Nicaraguan asylum seeker previously tortured in his home country. The order vacates requirements like an ankle monitor and curfew, citing violations of his due process rights. This follows his release from detention after a successful habeas corpus petition.

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A federal judge in Texas has ruled that the detention of Jose Alberto Gomez-Gonzalez, a 24-year-old student at Texas State University, violates his Fifth Amendment rights and ordered his release by March 1. The ruling criticizes the Trump administration's immigration enforcement rhetoric while sidestepping a recent appeals court decision on indefinite detention. Gomez-Gonzalez was detained in August 2025 following a traffic stop.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement has arrested over 100 refugees with no criminal records in Minnesota as part of a fraud investigation, prompting a federal judge to halt the detentions. Families describe traumatic experiences reminiscent of the violence they fled, while advocates call the actions un-American. The Trump administration defends the crackdown as targeting potential fraud in the immigration system.

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Attorneys for Kilmar Abrego Garcia urged U.S. District Judge Waverly Crenshaw to dismiss human smuggling charges against their client, labeling the Department of Justice's explanations as 'legally irrelevant and patently incredible.' The request follows an evidentiary hearing where government witnesses testified about the case's origins. The prosecution emerged after Abrego Garcia's wrongful deportation and court-ordered return.

Maryland Gov. Wes Moore signed emergency legislation on February 17, 2026, barring the state and local jurisdictions from entering into or maintaining agreements that deputize local officers for federal civil immigration enforcement under ICE’s 287(g) program. The measure gives jurisdictions with existing 287(g) agreements 90 days to end them, while supporters and critics continue to dispute the public-safety and community-trust implications.

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Tom Homan, President Donald Trump's border czar, urged Fairfax County authorities to work with Immigration and Customs Enforcement following recent murders allegedly committed by undocumented immigrants. Speaking on Fox News, Homan proposed arrangements similar to those he brokered in Minneapolis to facilitate the transfer of detainees. The comments came amid three high-profile killings in the sanctuary jurisdiction over the past month.

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