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Lee Kovarsky, D. Theodore Rave, and Steve Vladeck on Class Actions and the Alien Enemies Act Litigation
Kovarsky and Rave defend the use of class actions in AEA habeas cases. Vladeck highlights the significance of the Supreme Court's grant of an injunction to a "putative class" of AEA detainees.

I have previously written about how multiple lower courts have certified habeas classes in Alien Enemies Act deportation cases, and doing so may be the only way to ensure meaningful due process for detained migrants threatened with deportation. But I am not a class action expert, and am therefore limited in what I can say about the case for class action certification in habeas cases.
Legal scholars Lee Kovarsky and D. Theodore Rave (both at the University of Texas) are leading experts on habeas and class action issues, and their recent Lawfare article on "Class Actions and the Alien Enemies Act" is a must-read for anyone interested in these issues. Here is an excerpt:
Removal under the Alien Enemies Act (AEA) raises profound questions of government power, due process, and human dignity—so people sometimes wonder why skirmishes over class action certification are consuming so much legal energy. The answer is that justice is often bound up with procedure. And a federal court in the Northern District of Texas (NDTX) just created a major procedural problem when it refused to certify an AEA detainee class.
In what follows, we want to explain: (1) why AEA detainee class certification is so important and (2) why some of the ideas in the NDTX order are so troubling. (In the interests of disclosure, we have co-authored and signed an amicus brief on behalf of class action and habeas professors in this case.)
The Trump administration is trying to remove noncitizens who it alleges to be members of a Venezuelan gang, Tren de Aragua (TdA). The president invoked AEA removal authority in a proclamation asserting that TdA is an arm of the Venezuelan government that is "inva[ding]" or making a "predatory incursion" into the United States. The Supreme Court later held, in J.G.G. v. Trump, that AEA detainees are entitled to challenge the legality of their removal under the Act by seeking a writ of habeas corpus. The catch: Under the "immediate custodian rule," detainees must ordinarily mount habeas corpus challenges in the federal districts where they are detained. In other words, the AEA detainees can't all sue together in DC; instead, they have to bring their suits in the districts where they are being held.
But that doesn't mean they have to bring their habeas challenges on an individual basis. Nothing the Supreme Court said in J.G.G. forecloses seeking habeas relief through a class action lawsuit, and no matter where the litigation takes place, class treatment remains an indispensable procedural protection. In a class action, one or more named plaintiffs sues on behalf of a class of people who have similar legal claims. And the court can certify a class action to decide common questions that apply to the class as a whole. Class actions avoid inconsistent judgments and other inefficiencies that plague individual adjudication of common issues. They can also guarantee legal representation to vulnerable class members who would otherwise have limited access to counsel.
Since they published that article on May 15, the Supreme Court (a day later) extended injunctive relief to a "putative class" of Alien Enemies Act detainees (I wrote about the case here). Prof. Steve Vladeck (Georgetown) has an insightful piece on the significance of this aspect of the Court's ruling. An excerpt:
I know it's wonky, but the majority's holding that plaintiff classes can be provisionally certified by district courts for purposes of providing temporary relief even without resolving the likelihood of full class certification is going to have an impact in lots of cases—well beyond the AEA. That impact may well help to mitigate the damage caused by a ruling in the birthright citizenship cases that does away with, or even narrows, nationwide injunctions. But it is almost certainly going to have significant effects in other contexts, too—and not just in challenges to Trump administration policies. I remain very much not a fan of the justices reaching significant holdings in rulings on emergency applications. But here's one, at least, that might actually do some good on the ground.
I largely agree. But I would caution that temporary relief for a "putative class" is not the same thing as permanent relief for an actually certified class. And even the potential availability of full class certification is not a fully adequate substitute for nationwide injunctions.
In previous writings, I have covered the many substantive flaws with Trump's invocation of the AEA as a tool for deporting migrants in peacetime (see, e.g., here, here, and here). I have substantially more expertise on these issues than on the procedural questions involving class actions.
UPDATE: In the initial version of this post, I referred to D. Theodore Rave as D. Theodore "Rabe." I apologize for the mistake, which has now been corrected.
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Ilya, I'm definitely not a Rule 23(b)(2) truther. I totally agree that they can't soak up all the function of universal injunctions. The two are just different tools in the toolbox.
Vladek's piece is definitely worth a read. A few of us discussed it in the Friday open thread. His writing is good and quite accessible for the layperson.
anotyher case where someone with 'education' does not know that due process was in the Constitution long after it was everywhere else
The Maryland Act for the Liberties of the People ===> 1638
VA Declaration of Rights 5.8 1776
Bill of Rights due process 1791
So it has a 150 pre-history that shows the true meaning fo due proces and Trump has it right
May 16, 2025
A federal judge just ruled the 1798 Alien Act fully enforceable, clearing the way for mass deportations and sending shockwaves through Washington.
Legal scholars Lee Kovarsky and D. Theodore Rave emphasize the critical role of class actions in ensuring due process for Alien Enemies Act (AEA) detainees, arguing that procedural tools like class certification are essential for justice in complex habeas cases. Their concerns highlight how a federal court’s refusal to certify a class of AEA detainees could undermine access to fair legal representation and consistent rulings. Steve Vladeck further underscores the Supreme Court’s recognition of these concerns by extending injunctive relief to a "putative class," signaling the Court's awareness of the broader implications. Just as tools like Get Deadlox Mod at https://deadlox.net/ provide access to optimized gameplay experiences, procedural mechanisms like class actions enhance access to justice for vulnerable populations.
While the class action mechanism does serve a function of making the predominant, common argument plain and seeking justice on it for numerous typical folks, I'm beginning to wonder if a flurry of individual applications for the Writ might help shape the law a bit better. Over a hundred folks apparently have been removed under other authorities as part of this action, possibly to that place in El Salvador, and possibly not themselves being from El Salvador. Perhaps the prospect of lifetime imprisonment in a foreign prison should merit an individual proceeding.
Getting justice for the many is good, but if you percolate the coffee too quickly, the last folks to the carafe are drinking burnt bean juice.
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