Trump administration, Judge and immigration court
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Top US immigration judge says bond hearings should be denied despite court rulings, documents show
The top U.S. immigration judge has told her colleagues that they are not bound by a federal court ruling that declared the Trump administration cannot place thousands of people in mandatory detention without an opportunity to be released on bond.
In his first year back in office, President Trump has completely shifted the U.S. approach to immigration, launching the most visible enforcement effort seen in history while closing the door to
Federal appeals court sides with Trump administration in Mahmoud Khalil case, ruling a lower court judge lacked the authority to order the anti-Israel activist's release.
WASHINGTON, Jan 19 (Reuters) - The Trump administration said on Saturday it was appealing a ruling by a federal judge that put limits on tactics employed by U.S. immigration agents operating in Minneapolis.
Get the latest news and live updates on the Trump administration as House Speaker Mike Johnson marks a U.K. milestone and the Supreme Court weighs Hawaii's 'vampire' gun law.
Trump’s promise to prioritize deporting the "worst of the worst" has also fallen short. About 74% of the nearly 70,000 immigrants in Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention as of December, the most recent data available, have no criminal convictions.
The first year of President Donald Trump’s return to the White House was defined by clashes with the judiciary branch, as the president and his administration pushed forward with an aggressive immigration agenda.
Marking a year since his second inauguration, Donald Trump used a White House briefing to defend tariffs, renew his Greenland push, criticise Europe and lash out at prosecutors and immigrants.
Trump spoke for 2 hours after showing up at White House press briefing unexpectedly — but avoids questions on Greenland
During Trump's first year of his second term, many executive orders faced lawsuits challenging their actions, and many still remain in the courts.