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Supreme Court Enjoins Summary Removal of Alleged Tren de Aragua Members under Alien Enemies Act
A majority of the justices seem unconvinced the Administration was prepared to provide the process that was due. Justices Alito and Thomas dissent.
This afternoon, the Supreme Court granted an application for an injunction against the federal government barring the summary removal of Venezuelan nationals alleged to be members of Tren de Aragua (TdA) under the Alien Enemies Act. By a 7-2 vote, the justices concluded that the detainees were entitled to greater process than they had been provided, and that the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit erred in dismissing the detainee's claims for lack of jurisdiction. The Court further treated the application for an injunction as a petition for certiorari, granted the petition, and remanded the case back to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit for further proceedings.
The opinion for the Court in A.A.R.P. v. Trump was per curiam (the fifth such opinion this term). Justice Alito dissented, joined by Justice Thomas, arguing that the Court lacked jurisdiction and, even assuming jurisdiction, the applicants failed to satisfy the requirements for injunctive relief. Justice Alito also objected to granting certiorari before judgment given the lack of lower court decisions on the merits.
Here's how the opinion sets up the questions before the Court:
The President has invoked the Alien Enemies Act (AEA), Rev. Stat. §4067, 50 U. S. C. §21, to remove Venezuelan nationals who are members of Tren de Aragua (TdA), a designated foreign terrorist organization. See Presidential Proclamation No. 10903, 90 Fed. Reg. 13033 (2025). Applicants are two detainees identified as members of TdA and a putative class of similarly situated detainees in the Northern District of Texas. All of the alleged TdA members in the putative class are currently being held in U. S. detention facilities. In the application before the Court, the detainees seek injunctive relief against summary removal under the AEA.
In recounting the facts, the Court highlights how close it appears some of the applicants came to being deported without adequate process. The way these facts are recounted suggests that at least some of the justices are increasingly skeptical of the Justice Department's representations and the extent to which administration attorneys are attempting to comply with court orders and legal requirements in good faith. (It is no accident the opinion makes reference to Abrego Garcia, and the federal government's representation that no federal court has jurisdiction to fix the federal government's error in deporting him to El Salvador.) This would seem to confirm that a majority of the justices are no longer willing to automatically grant the presumption of regularity to the Trump Administration on deportation-related matters, and this may affect the ability of the Solicitor General to advance Administration positions in other cases.
As in several other recent cases, the Court's opinion highlights its disagreement with the Fifth Circuit.
The Fifth Circuit erred in dismissing the detainees' appeal for lack of jurisdiction. Appellate courts have jurisdiction to review interlocutory orders that have "the practical effect of refusing an injunction." . . . A district court's inaction in the face of extreme urgency and a high risk of "serious, perhaps irreparable," consequences may have the effect of refusing an injunction. . . . Here the District Court's inaction—not for 42 minutes but for 14 hours and 28 minutes—had the practical effect of refusing an injunction to detainees facing an imminent threat of severe, irreparable harm. Accordingly, we vacate the judgment of the Court of Appeals.
The Court then goes on to reiterate the basic constitutional point that Due Process is guaranteed to persons, and not merely citizens or those lawfully present in the country.
"[T]he Fifth Amendment entitles aliens to due process of law in the context of removal proceedings." Trump v. J. G. G., 604 U. S. ___, ___ (2025). . . "Procedural due process rules are meant to protect" against "the mistaken or unjustified deprivation of life, liberty, or property." . . . We have long held that "no person shall be" removed from the United States "without opportunity, at some time, to be heard." . . . Due process requires notice that is "reasonably calculated, under all the circumstances, to apprise interested parties" and that "afford[s] a reasonable time . . . to make [an] appearance." . . . Accordingly, in J. G. G., this Court explained—with all nine Justices agreeing—that "AEA detainees must receive notice . . . that they are subject to removal under the Act . . . within a reasonable time and in such a manner as will allow them to actually seek habeas relief " before removal. , , , In order to "actually seek habeas relief," a detainee must have sufficient time and information to reasonably be able to contact counsel, file a petition, and pursue appropriate relief.
None of this means the applicants will not ultimately be removed from the country, however. Rather, any removal will only come after they have received the process to which they are due. As the Court notes further:
To be clear, we decide today only that the detainees are entitled to more notice than was given on April 18, and we grant temporary injunctive relief to preserve our jurisdiction while the question of what notice is due is adjudicated. . . . We did not on April 19—and do not now—address the underlying merits of the parties' claims regarding the legality of removals under the AEA. We recognize the significance of the Government's national security interests as well as the necessity that such interests be pursued in a manner consistent with the Constitution. . . .
And as if to make the point clear, the opinion ends noting "The Government may remove the named plaintiffs or putative class members under other lawful authorities."
As for what comes next, the Court explains:
The judgment of the Fifth Circuit is vacated, and the case is remanded to the Fifth Circuit. In resolving the detainees' appeal, the Fifth Circuit should address (1) all the normal preliminary injunction factors, including likelihood of success on the merits, as to the named plaintiffs' underlying habeas claims that the AEA does not authorize their removal pursuant to the President's March 14, 2025,Proclamation, and (2) the issue of what notice is due, as to the putative class's due process claims against summary removal. The Government is enjoined from removing the named plaintiffs or putative class members in this action under the AEA pending order by the Fifth Circuit and disposition of the petition for a writ of certiorari, if such writ is timely sought. Should the petition for a writ of certiorari be denied, this order shall terminate automatically. In the event the petition for a writ of certiorari is granted, the order shall terminate upon the sending down of the judgment of this Court.
Justice Kavanaugh also wrote a separate concurrence, agreeing with the Court's decision to grant the injunction, but disagreeing with the Court's decision to remand the case back to the Fifth Circuit. In Justice Kavanaugh's view, the Court should have granted certiorari, ordered expedited briefing, and resolved the underlying legal issues.
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Huge mistake by the judiciary. Now the GOP has an insurmountable issue to dominate the 2026 election cycle, the massively liberal judicial branch does nothing to stop a massive illegal invasion and then effectively prohibits the deportation of these criminal illegal immigrants. The rule of law is completely disgraced in the minds of the vast majority of American voters which ensures GOP control of the both chambers of the legislature in the 2026 midterms.
Whether the correct response to this is, "Concern Troll," or, "Underinformed," remains an open question. Maybe it's both.
This is the Republican's Dobbs Decision -- and much as we have more abortions now than before, we will have more illegal aliens booted than before.
But SCOTUS has given every Republican candidate in a primary and general election something to bring supporters out of the woodwork with -- and we will have gruesome (and racist) ads about crimes committed by these Illegal Alien CRIMINALS to fire up the base.
We actually won today.
Why? If these people really are criminals, they will be incarcerated while they are given their due process rights. The Supreme Court did nothing to stop the incarceration. All they did was say that, without giving these people due process they cannot be deported under the AEA.
My worry is this. If Homeland Security picks up a US citizen, sends him immediately to Texas, and the next day deports them, what recourse does this citizen have? The same thing that prevents the government from searching you without a warrant, protects you from the government deporting you without due process.
WEre you seeing this when the millions were spilling in while Joe was on the beach. probably not
Vote for us she we'll make sure the Dems don't appoint terrible judges like Roberts, Gorsuch, Kavanaugh and Coney Barrett!
Unlike Dobbs this is not an important decision. The constitutionality of abortion affected millions of lives. A thousand tattooed Venezuelans don't really matter. I understand the "rule of law" arguments. I'm with the Supreme Court majority on this one. But the average voter won't notice the difference.
Same with wrongly removed Garcia. He is a MacGuffin. His purpose in life is to get the two sides chasing each other around.
It's terrible. If only they'd written "The Government may remove the named plaintiffs or putative class members under other lawful authorities" or something like it.
The Ds won't let us deport anyone we want to a brutal prison without due process is not a winning message.
The Ds running on the Rs hellbent obsession with kidnapping and torturing innocent people is a winning message.
Liek the stealing of Kristi Noem's belongings, or the resignatino of that that ACLU woman when her daughter met a MAN in the unisex bathroom, it will be the death of some Court Justice's relative by an illegal alien that will shake the life into these empty-souled legal robots.
Looking forward to getting carpal tunnel syndrome from Ilya's impending gloat post.
More bad faith lunacy from Trump haters. SCOTUS once again violates Marbury v. Madison to create jurisdiction out of thin air. Those screaming Karen's who threaten to "sue you all the way to the supreme court" may very well have their cases fast tracked to SCOTUS in the coming years. America weeps.
And America Votes in 18 months. We may do a lot better on the midterms than we expected...
The federal courts have jurisdiction over deportations.
I assume this is the same idiot who said this a few weeks ago. SCOTUS cannot “violate Marbury”; the entire phrasing is nonsensical. And of course it didn’t do anything remotely like that.
I for one am eagerly awaiting Josh's screed/job application where he explains why this is the biggest travesty since that time they let the gays get married.
So hard to stand out these days. I think the pick-me strivers who haven't been selected yet are going to have to go big.
Landing an op-ed in the times about how if summary torture and execution of Democrats without trail were REALLY illegal, why would people have voted for orange man?
Or maybe personally stealing an immigrant baby and delivering it to Miller.
You called it
Gays getting married is a perversion, this is simple stupidity
"Gays getting married is a perversion, this is simple stupidity"
I am curious, SFNP. Do you prefer unmarried buttsex to married buttsex? It is not as if being unmarried will prevent gays from having sex with one another.
If you have a daughter, would you want her to marry a same sex attracted man who has tons of hot monkey sex on the downlow?
"the mistaken or unjustified deprivation of life, liberty, or property."
OK, maybe they aren't all TdA, but they ARE all Illegal Aliens and we can deport them for that. Deport ALL of them, regardless of TdA status.
And the ONLY thing the hearing officer has to hear is if they are here illegally. Bye, bye...
They aren't all here unlawfully. But those who are could be deported through ordinary means. So, why doesn't Trump do that?
He can't deport them under the law. The law requires a hearing before an immigration judge before deportation can occur. And Trump fired a bunch of immigration judges. There simply are not enough people in the government to do what Trump wants to do.
"“You go to war with the army you have, not the army you might want or wish to have at a later time.”
Because that would require offering actual evidence before a legally constituted tribunal.
No, you schmuck, they’re not. That’s the whole point. That’s why Trump is trying to use the AEA: because he doesn’t have any lawful basis to deport them.
Both wrong.
For the sake of legal aliens the law requires us to deal with illegal aliens. It is protection of the rights of legal aliens. If you are depending the stupidest laziest worst-spoken politician of the last 150 years, please do it in the open.
The misuse of the AEA here is not quite as bad as the Administration's birthright citizenship argument, but it is up there.
SCOTUS points out that the Trump administration claims it can't retrieve migrants once they've been sent to CECOT, adding: Well, if that's true, then migrants must receive especially robust due process protections before they're expelled to El Salvador!
Quite true. I don't like that final kicker. The Administration has shown enough evidence of bad faith that any removal of the class should be given special scrutiny. The possibility of bad faith or some other misuse of power to "find" a reason is evident.
Very un-legal thinking. You can have a perfectly good case on bad faith. It isn't thumbs up or down on over 10 million unvetted immigrants , you know , like a bet placed onthe Super Bowl
Has the rock sunk to the bottom of the SCOTUS well that representations to a federal court by Trump administration DOJ attorneys cannot be trusted?
Perhaps it has, at least for seven justices.
The one bit I have trouble with is the assertion is that the stay is necessary in aid of determining jurisdiction. That's like the league office telling the umps to make sure that the home team gives a copy of the ground rules for the park to the visitors, so that both teams know the rules, because one team might try to take advantage of the situation, and the other team would then file an appeal with the league office, and then the league office would have to determine if they had a right to appeal to the league office. Although another equally grave harm would have happened absent the injunction (the planes would have left), the harm of the prospective action which would merit intervention and prompt the question of jurisdiction has yet to accrue. Clearly, an injunction was needed, but the justification seems wrong.
Also, the timetable for seeking interlocutory cert (and the subsequent lifting of the order) seems a bit vague (after the due process ruling? after the class certification ruling? after final judgment? at the point of being put on a plane and sent off to a foreign prison for life because of the way you waved at the camera on Facebook?).
But any answer that keeps the planes on the ground and allows this to be talked over for a bit is fine in my book.
Mr. D.
Preserving jurisdiction, not determining it.
Point taken. And re-reading it, I see that now that the application has been construed as a petition, the normal course of review no longer relies on protecting the putative class prior to certification. So res #1 was the earlier removal, which was stopped under that theory, and res #2, the possible due process harm which will follow (vel non) the circuit's definition of the due process rights, will be dealt with in the normal course. In fairness, though, as the circuit had yet to produce anything that certiorari could grab hold of, a proper opinion-relating-to-order at the time would likely have cited determining future jurisdiction as the specific ground.
Mr. D.
"Also, the timetable for seeking interlocutory cert (and the subsequent lifting of the order) seems a bit vague (after the due process ruling? after the class certification ruling? after final judgment? at the point of being put on a plane and sent off to a foreign prison for life because of the way you waved at the camera on Facebook?)."
No, there is nothing vague about it. Supreme Court Rule 11 does not specify a time for filing a petition for certiorari before judgment as to a case pending in the U.S. Court of Appeals. Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2101(e), however, "An application to the Supreme Court for a writ of certiorari to review a case before judgment has been rendered in the court of appeals may be made at any time before judgment."
But that's exactly the vagueness. The order references the circuit's prospective order on remand. It then references the disposition of the petition, if timely sought. So there will be a second cert petition -- but when does that happen? On the order of the circuit setting the process? On the findings of that process? (With nothing in the record, the circuit presumably can't reach the merits of individual claimants in its initial order.) Do petitioners/applicants hold their fire until the proceedings have run their course? Do they challenge the standards in the order on remand, before the hearings start? As you point out, the cert petition can happen at any point, up to merger of all and sundry in the final order. Does the stay then last until the case is completely addressed as to all class members? Does the stay issued to protect the putative class go away if the action turns into a series of simple habeas claims? (And if so, how, as there might be no petition to deny.)
Mr. D.
Interesting to see that Kavanaugh, of all people, is sufficiently sick of the Fifth Circuit's nonsense that he doesn't think it's worth the time of having them write yet another terrible opinion just so the Supreme Court can take the case up and overrule them yet again.
Did the Fifth become the 'Nutty Ninth', in your estimation?
This decision just buys time. Why bother with a Gold Visa (PRICE = 5MM USD) if SCOTUS is fine with people just crossing the border?
Did you hear that 'whoosh'? It was the argument flying by your head.
You miss the point. Noone is arguing that people cannot be deported. Some argue that they should not be deported. Others like me are ok if the right people are deported. I (and the Supreme Court, it seems) just want to make sure DHS gets it right. It seems, unfortunately, that DHS is prone to make mistakes.
That argument makes no sense if you yawned as the 10 million plus came over the border and didn't see that it couldn't be legal if it results in the mess we have right now.
I'd be a lot more impressed with the Court if they'd shown this kind of fortitude and impatience with excuses during Covid.
Are any of these detainees protesting that they are legally allowed to be in the United States? If not, what would they claim in a hearing with all the "due process" in the world?
I would have a lot of sympathy towards them if there were a number among them that had a legal right to be here but because of bureaucratic errors they were slated for deportation. But correct me if I am wrong, not one single plaintiff has made the claim that he is legally here. That's the due process he is given---the determination---and if nobody is claiming otherwise there is nothing for anyone to decide.
It seems to be a cause celebre for groups who don't want any deportations at all to abuse the court system in bad faith to throw a monkey wrench in the whole process to slow it down. That shouldn't be rewarded.
Yes.
Once more for the really really really really stupid: yes.