ICE Denies Reason Access to Immigration Court In Miami Detention Center
"It appears that access to this court was improperly denied," an attorney for the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press says.

Immigration courts are supposed to be open to the public, but Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) refused to allow a Reason reporter to enter a federal detention center in Miami where hearings take place.
And afterward the government more or less admitted we should have been let inside.
Yesterday, I drove up to the gate of the Krome Detention Center, an ICE facility on the western edge of Miami, and identified myself as a reporter who wanted to observe the immigration court inside. The guards look puzzled; court observers are out of the ordinary at immigration hearings.
But these are not ordinary times for U.S. immigration courts, and there have been numerous accusations of severe overcrowding and inhumane treatment at the Krome Detention Center since President Donald Trump's mass deportation program began. Those accusations sparked protests over the weekend outside the center.
I've walked into county, state, and federal courts over my career without complications, so I was surprised when the gate guards claimed that only lawyers and relatives were allowed into the immigration court.
I was all the more surprised because I'd done a bit of homework before I left to go to the court. The Justice Department's Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR) website for the Miami Krome Immigration Court states that "hearings are open to the public, with limited exceptions, as specified in law." The court website encourages the media to contact the EOIR to coordinate a visit, but it also says, "You do not need to notify the immigration court in advance of your visit."
A fact sheet linked on the court site further asks court observers to give the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) two days' notice to "allow facility personnel sufficient time to process your visit request and to arrange for an escort." I decided over the weekend to go court-watching and didn't notice anything saying I couldn't show up unannounced.
When I informed the agents what the court's website said, they told me to pull my car over to the side while they called their supervisor. After several minutes, one of the agents returned from the gatehouse and said, "Sorry, ICE supervisor says no."
The federal regulation governing access to immigration hearings states that immigration courts "shall be open to the public" and can only be closed by an immigration judge for several specific reasons, such as protecting witnesses, minors, or abused spouses.
"It appears that access to this court was improperly denied," says Renee Griffin, a staff attorney at the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press. "Federal regulations generally permit reporters and the public to observe proceedings in immigration courts across the country, and Krome Detention Center is no exception."
ICE did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The Justice Department EOIR, on the other hand, responded promptly and helpfully, offering to coordinate with the Krome facility so I could plan another visit to court-watch.
An EOIR spokesperson also said the office "notified DHS that the Miami Krome Immigration Court is open daily to the public."
That seems to be a tacit admission that I shouldn't have been turned away at the gate. It would be an absurdity if the court were open daily to the public but entry was restricted at the discretion of an ICE supervisor.
But it occurs to me now that when the EOIR highly encourages court observers to give advance notice of their visits, it may be a tactful way of warning that the staff at DHS detention centers might not appreciate the legal imperative of "shall be open" without a reminder.
I sent a follow-up inquiry to the EOIR asking if DHS could refuse entry to observers who showed up unannounced. The office did not immediately respond.
I didn't set out with the intention of driving all the way to the Krome Detention Center just to turn around—I would've much rather gone to court—but it is useful and instructive to occasionally stress test public access laws.
It's especially important when the Trump administration is dismantling oversight mechanisms and bullying institutions like media outlets and law firms into silence. Last month, the Trump administration gutted the three DHS offices with oversight of federal immigration detention.
As more internal checks on government power are removed, external checks like public access to government records and proceedings become even more vital. And reporters, concerned citizens, and watchdog groups will need to assert them all the more forcefully.
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Good job doing “boots on the ground” reporting.
A group of citizen journalists that like to record in public places (known as auditors) often run into uninformed government gatekeepers.
Ship out the ones here illegally, end the welfare state, and have decent protections against rabble reentering would hopefully result in most of the ICE employees being laid off after.
“MAGA=Miriam Adelson’s Goals Achieved”
What politician of any stripe is opposing Trumps unconstitutional fascism and complicity in the Israeli genocide in Gaza?
They’re all in on it, just sneakier than the arrogant loudmouth Trump. Their hands so deep in the pockets of genocidal Jews, politicians aren’t working for their constituents.
This is how Jews behave as they commit their holocaust in Gaza.
This is how Jews behaved when they overthrew the Russian monarchy to create the Soviet Union and the KGB.
But as long as the cerebral intelligencia only pontificate while the slack jawed masses drool, the real agents of change are the people who get off their asses to stand up to be seen and heard in protest.
Refuted.
And your Hamas masters are all going to die.
Hail Israel! Death to Hamas!
The war criminal Netanyahu with international warrants for his arrest.
The United Nations International Court of Justice has Israel on trial for committing genocide.
34 nations that support the case against Israel
South Africa
Bolivia
Maldives
Chile
Türkiye
Spain
Palestine
Mexico
Libya
Columbia
Nicaragua
Ireland
Egypt
Cuba
Belgium
Algeria
Bangladesh
Brazil
China
Comoros
Djibouti
Indonesia
Iraq
Jordan
Lebanon
Malaysia
Namibia
Pakistan
Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Slovenia
Syria
Venezuela
Zimbabwe
Fuck Israel and fuck genocidal Jews.
Shithead nazi once again posts a list of shitty countries.
Everyone is witnessing the genocidal Jews hypocritical perspective of nations that oppose genocide, when Jews are committing the genocide.
These are the optics.
Oh my. On the global freedom score, the world average is about 56.
Your list there is averaged at about 48. With 60% being below 50.
That's uh... that's some reputable nations you got gathered there.
Israel, on the other hand - wow, 74! Not quite as good as the USA's 83, but we're also not surrounded by and on daily watch for bloodthirsty killers in every direction.
Witness another waste of skin hypocrite jew trying to disparage nations that oppose the genocide that Jews are committing.
Using a feeble argument that nations with a higher “global freedom score” have more credibility than those with a lower score.
Many of the nations against the Israeli genocide in Gaza have higher scores than Israel. According to you, they must have more credibility than Israel.
Does it work like that or not?
South Africa 79
Ireland 97
Belgium 96
Chile 94
Spain 90
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 90
Namibia 77
Slovenia 96
Useful, but any time you're the "first" to do something out of the ordinary, it's normal for the bureaucrats to scramble to figure out the rules.
Maybe the supervisor read your articles and determined you are not a reporter?
"Open to the public", like "shall not be infringed" can mean many things.
Perhaps you just need to pay for a full background check, pay for a full set of fingerprints, pay for a bill of rights permit, pay for hours of federally approved reporter training, and wait thirty days, then try again?
Reason staff have historically voted ‘strategically and reluctantly’ for the people who put such policies in place.
I still remember that time I sat for two hours at the DMV with a little plastic card with a two digit number on it only to be told, it's closing time GTFO and hand over the card. And you're gonna need a ride home because your license is now expired. Okay this is bullshit but hardly unique to immigration courts. You may be a journalist but it's the same government.
Your license was already expired?
Not when I arrived but after I left.
No 30 days grace period?
Several times I have gone months with an expired license. Often discovered at inconvenient times (renting cars a couple of times.) Each time I drove away. Once with a rental car.
Did Tufts University get to weigh in on the DMV kicking you out?
“ICE Denies Reason Access to Immigration Court In Miami Detention Center”
Good.
Did you kneel down against the gate outside (way outside) and wait for a good photo-op?
So some low-paid security guards (who magically morphed into "agents") are just doing their job with the info they have, and 'reason' tries to blow it up into constitutional conspiracy crisis. Let me say it once again -- egomaniacal reporters are not the fourth branch of government. You want to be a journalist, go buy a My Little Pony diary.
The more likely scenario is that they did not know what the policy was because no reporter had been interested in attending before.
CJ - keep it up! Hold these thugs feet to the fire!
Cool. Now build a time machine and do the J6ers.
I was at a karaoke bar recently and the server said I couldn't order any food after 10pm. Turns out the server didn't know all the facts. Next time I was there I found out that, with a couple of exception, I could have ordered most items for another hour. I really wanted those deep fried cheese curds, darn it!
But I didn't write a story about it and try to make it a bigger deal than it was.
But these are not ordinary times for U.S. immigration courts
No they are not. After years if sitting idle, someone had to fire up the coal furnaces and figure out how they even worked.
I'm guessing it's because you hadn't showered in a month and declared deodorant "oppressive."
For as much as we may all more or less on general libertarian principles, there's also the principle that nobody can really stand being physically near one. *gag*
So the headline should read “Trump administration exemplary in correcting error denying public access to ICE Hearing”
Subheading “In the prior administration this would have been swept under the rug”
Sometimes TDS backfires.