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Federal Appeals Court Rejects ICE No Bond Detention Policy In Major Win For Immigrants

The 11th Circuit ruling pushes back against the Trump administration’s expanded immigration detention policy and confirms an important principle for many families. Detention should not automatically replace individualized review when a person has strong family ties, work history, no criminal record, and a record of appearing for court.

What The Appeals Court Decided

A federal appeals court based in Atlanta has rejected the Trump administration’s expanded no bond detention policy for people in immigration proceedings. In a 2 to 1 decision, the 11th United States Circuit Court of Appeals held that the government could not use Section 1225(b)(2)(A) of the Immigration and Nationality Act as a blanket rule to detain every person who entered without inspection and was later found inside the United States. The court explained that, for nearly thirty years, many people in this category were treated as eligible to ask for bond while their immigration cases moved forward. The Department of Homeland Security changed that interpretation last year and argued that these individuals must be detained without bond. The 11th Circuit rejected that reading.

The case involved two Mexican nationals who had entered the United States without inspection but had lived in the country for years before being detained after traffic stops in Florida. According to the court, one had lived in the United States since 2019, had no criminal history, and had two United States citizen children. The other had lived in the United States since 2015, had three United States citizen children, and had only minor traffic citations before the encounter with law enforcement.

Why This Ruling Matters

This decision matters because immigration detention is supposed to be civil, not criminal punishment. A bond hearing gives a detained person the opportunity to ask an immigration judge for release while the deportation case continues. That does not mean release is automatic. It means a judge can look at the individual facts, including whether the person is a danger to the community, whether they are likely to appear for court, whether they have family in the United States, and whether they have evidence of stable employment or community ties.

The 11th Circuit said the government’s interpretation would give the Executive branch authority to detain, without bond, every person present in the country who had not been formally admitted. The court found that Congress did not create that kind of unlimited no bond detention authority in the statute. The majority wrote that the immigration law preserved the traditional distinction between recent border or port of entry cases and people already living inside the United States.

The Bigger National Fight Over Immigration Detention

This issue is likely not over. The Associated Press reported that the 11th Circuit decision deepened a split among federal appeals courts. The 2nd Circuit had already reached a similar result in April, while the 5th and 8th Circuits had upheld the Trump administration’s policy. The 7th Circuit produced a divided result, with judges taking different positions. Because federal appeals courts are divided, the United States Supreme Court could be asked to resolve the issue.

That uncertainty is important for families. A person’s bond rights may depend on where they are detained, which federal circuit controls the case, the exact immigration charges, criminal history if any, entry history, prior removal history, pending applications, and whether counsel can move quickly. This is why families should not assume that one viral headline applies the same way everywhere.

What A Bond Hearing Actually Does

A bond hearing is not the same as winning an immigration case. It is a separate custody proceeding focused on whether a person should remain detained while the removal case continues. The Executive Office for Immigration Review explains that, in certain circumstances, a person detained by the Department of Homeland Security can be released after payment of bond, and an immigration judge may review or redetermine the bond set by DHS. EOIR also explains that a bond request usually should include the person’s full name, alien registration number, bond amount if one was set, and the detention facility.

At the hearing, the immigration judge considers whether the person is eligible for bond and whether release would pose a danger to people or property, whether the person is likely to appear for future immigration proceedings, and whether there is a national security concern. EOIR also makes clear that a person may be represented by counsel at no expense to the government in a bond hearing.

What Detained Immigrants And Families Should Do Now

Families should treat this ruling as a reason to act quickly, not as a reason to wait. When someone is detained by ICE, every day matters. The family should gather immigration documents, criminal records if any, proof of address, proof of employment, tax records, medical records, birth certificates of United States citizen children, marriage certificates, letters of support, proof of community involvement, and evidence that the person has appeared for court or complied with immigration requirements in the past.

If the person has been denied a bond hearing under the expanded no bond policy, an attorney may need to evaluate whether a bond motion, custody redetermination request, appeal, or habeas corpus petition is appropriate. AP reported that many detainees who could not ask immigration judges for bond have filed habeas petitions in federal court, creating a major increase in detention related litigation.

Why This Is A Due Process Issue For Families

The heart of the dispute is simple. Should the government be able to detain a person automatically, even if that person has lived in the United States for many years, has no criminal record, has United States citizen children, has steady work, and has strong reasons to appear in court? Or should that person at least have the opportunity to appear before a judge and ask for release?

The 11th Circuit’s answer was that the statute does not give the government the sweeping authority it claimed. That is a meaningful protection for due process because immigration detention can separate parents from children, interrupt work, damage pending legal cases, and pressure people to give up valid claims simply because they cannot tolerate being detained.

How Spar And Bernstein Can Help

At The Law Offices of Spar and Bernstein, our immigration team understands that detention creates immediate fear and confusion for families. A strong legal response begins with fast action, careful document collection, and a clear custody strategy. For detained immigrants, an attorney can review whether the person may be eligible for a bond hearing, prepare evidence of family and community ties, challenge an improper custody classification, file motions, preserve appeal rights, and evaluate whether federal court action may be necessary.

This ruling is a reminder that immigration law is not just enforcement. It is also procedure, evidence, fairness, and individualized review. Families facing ICE detention should not rely on rumors or assume that detention is final. With the right legal guidance, many people may still have a path to request release, defend their case, and remain connected to the family and community that need them.