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Tag: liberia

  • Legal scholars raise concerns about internal ICE policy authorizing entry into homes without judicial warrants

    An internal U.S. Customs and Immigration Enforcement memo from a whistleblower and obtained by the Associated Press that authorizes officers to enter homes without judicial warrants is raising concerns among legal scholars who say the policy is a clear violation of the Constitution. 

    The directive from last May states that while the U.S. Department of Homeland Security had not historically relied on administrative warrants to arrest immigrants subject to final orders of removal at their homes, “the DHS Office of the General Counsel has recently determined that the U.S. Constitution, the Immigration and Nationality Act, and the immigration regulations do not prohibit relying on administrative warrants for this purpose.”

    Administrative warrants are signed by immigration officials, not judges.

    The previously undisclosed memo comes as Operation Metro Surge continues in Minnesota. Authorities call it the largest immigration operation ever in Minnesota with more than 3,000 federal immigration agents assigned to the state. The operation has sparked clashes between ICE and protestors, leading to several violent encounters including the shooting death of Renee Good by an ICE officer on Jan. 7.

    Agents on Jan. 11 forcibly entered the home of a Liberian citizen living in Minneapolis to arrest him without a judicial warrant, a federal judge said. Garrison Gibson, the man detained, was in the country legally under terms that he met regularly with immigration authorities, according to the judge’s order. 

    U.S. District Judge Jeffrey Bryan said Gibson’s arrest violated the Fourth Amendment, which protects against unreasonable search and seizures.

    “To arrest him, respondents forcibly entered [his] home without his consent and without a judicial warrant,” Bryan wrote. 

    That law enforcement would need such a warrant approved by a judge in order to enter a home is well-established legal precedent reiterated by the courts time and again, constitutional experts told WCCO news. 

    Emmanuel Mauleón, associate professor of law at the University of Minnesota who specializes in the Fourth Amendment, said that administrative warrants authorize arrests, but that does not mean those arrests can happen inside a person’s residence without their consent to enter.

    “This has been long-standing Fourth Amendment interpretation. There has been no U.S. Supreme Court case ever that has found that an administrative warrant meets this bar,” Mauleón said. “What I’ll say is the Fourth Amendment probable cause requirement is not a high bar, so that the idea that they can’t even meet that is deeply troubling. Or the idea that they’re not going to go about the process of seeking a warrant is deeply troubling.”

    Jimmy Percival, general counsel for DHS, in an opinion piece published by the Wall Street Journal, defended the policy and said it was both reasonable and lawful. 

    “While administrative warrants may satisfy the Fourth Amendment for any arrest of an illegal alien, ICE currently uses these warrants to enter an illegal alien’s residence only when the alien has received a final order of removal from an immigration judge,” Percival wrote. “That means the alien has already seen a judge, presented his case, received due process, and been ordered removed from the country.”

    Mauleón disputed that characterization, again emphasizing that administrative warrants authorizing arrests are not the same as “entry into a constitutionally protected space.”

    “The best parallel that I could suggest is you could imagine that a police officer is conducting an investigation or wants to arrest somebody, and instead of going to a judge and saying, ‘Hey, this is the evidence that I have, do I have probable cause to search their home?’ They just go to their typewriter and type up a sheet of paper that says, ‘I have a warrant to search their home.’ That’s essentially what DHS is doing,” Mauleón said. 

    Vice President JD Vance during a visit to Minneapolis on Thursday was asked if he thought the ICE policy violates the Fourth Amendment. He did not directly say if he thought so, but conceded courts could disagree with that policy and vowed to follow an order if they did. 

    “Our understanding is that you can enforce the immigration laws of the country under an administrative order if you have an administrative warrant. That’s what we think. That’s our understanding of the law. That’s our best faith attempt to understand the law,” Vance told reporters. “Again, this is something courts will weigh in on. I won’t speak to that, but yes, most immigration law in our country is not done through the criminal system with the judge. It’s done through the administrative law system.”

    David Schultz, a law professor at the University of St. Thomas and political science professor at Hamline University who focuses on the Constitution, called requiring judicial warrants before entering a home an “incredibly well-established principle of American law” that dates back to the country’s founding. 

    “There really is no debate on this one among legal scholars that an administrative warrant gives you no authority to enter houses at all,” Schultz said. 

    The memo on administrative warrants was not shared widely within the agency but has been used to train ICE officers, according to the whistleblower complaint.

    Caroline Cummings

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  • Trump administration says Kilmar Abrego Garcia has received sufficient due process, asks judge to allow deportation to Liberia

    The Trump administration late Friday urged a federal judge in Maryland to allow immigration officials to deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia to the West African country of Liberia, saying the U.S. government has cleared the final legal hurdle in the deportation process.

    Abrego Garcia’s case has been at the center of the national debate over President Trump’s immigration crackdown ever since he was deported to El Salvador in March, in violation of a federal immigration judge’s order that barred his deportation to his native country. After being held in detention facilities in El Salvador for months, including a notorious mega-prison known as CECOT, Abrego Garcia was returned to the U.S. in June, only to face federal criminal charges of human smuggling. He has denied those charges.

    While a trial on those criminal charges has yet to commence, the Trump administration has mounted an aggressive effort to deport Abrego Garcia from the U.S. a second time, proposing to send him to several far-flung African countries, including Uganda, Eswatini and most recently, Liberia.

    Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a Maryland man who was deported to El Salvador earlier this year, arrives for a check-in at the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) field office in Baltimore, Maryland, US, on Aug. 25, 2025.

    Graeme Sloan / Bloomberg via Getty Images


    The Justice Department filed a motion on Friday asking U.S. District Court Judge Paula Xinis to scrap a ruling she issued this summer barring the government from deporting Abrego Garcia, arguing all legal avenues to contest his deportation have been exhausted.

    On Oct. 28, the Justice Department said, a U.S. government asylum officer interviewed Abrego Garcia, who remains in federal immigration detention, and determined he had failed to prove he would face persecution or torture in Liberia.

    Any additional due process steps for Abrego Garcia are unwarranted, the Justice Department argued.

    “Petitioner’s claims are procedurally barred multiple times over and fail on the merits in any event,” the Justice Department said in its filing. “This Court should therefore dissolve its preliminary injunction and permit the government to remove Petitioner to Liberia.”

    The Trump administration submitted declarations from top U.S. officials asserting that Liberia has made “sufficient and credible” assurances that Abrego Garcia will not be harmed there or sent to another nation where he would be persecuted. In a press release late last month, Liberia’s government said it had agreed to receive Abrego Garcia on “a strictly humanitarian and temporary basis,” following a U.S. request.

    Abrego Garcia’s attorneys, however, argued in their own court filing on Friday that the interview conducted by a U.S. asylum officer last month did not amount to sufficient due process.

    “The Government insists that the unreasoned determination of a single immigration officer—who concluded that Abrego Garcia failed to establish that it is ‘more likely than not’ that he will be persecuted or tortured in Liberia— satisfies due process. It does not,” they wrote.

    His lawyers also argued the Trump administration’s ongoing effort to send Abrego Garcia to Africa — instead of Costa Rica, which has agreed to offer him refugee status — is a form of retaliation. They noted the government offered to send Abrego Garcia to Costa Rica this summer but only if he pleaded guilty to the federal human smuggling charges he faces in Tennessee.

    “The timeline suggests a pattern: when the Government received orders it disliked in Abrego Garcia’s civil case challenging his unlawful removal to El Salvador; it initiated a criminal prosecution in retaliation; and when it received orders it disliked in Abrego Garcia’s criminal case, it initiated third-country removal efforts in retaliation,” the attorneys said.

    The lawyers asked Xinis, the federal judge in Maryland, to prohibit the Trump administration from deporting Abrego Garcia to Liberia “unless and until an immigration judge concurs” with the determination made by the asylum officer who interviewed him. They said that review should consider the possibility that their client could be returned to El Salvador after being sent to Liberia.

    Abrego Garcia first came to the U.S. in 2011, when he was 16. According to court documents, he entered the country illegally. In 2019, Abrego Garcia was arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement after an encounter with local police outside of a Maryland Home Depot. Abrego Garcia’s attorneys said he went there looking for work.

    Court documents show an immigration judge initially denied Abrego Garcia’s release on bond, partially due to information submitted by the government that it said tied him to the MS-13 gang. The judge’s bond denial, upheld by an immigration appeals board, mentioned information from an informant whom the government deemed to be credible. Abrego Garcia has denied being part of a gang.

    Abrego Garcia was ultimately released from ICE custody later in 2019 after another immigration judge granted him “withholding of removal,” barring his deportation to El Salvador due to concerns he could be targeted by gangs there. However, he was also issued a deportation order based on his illegal entry into the U.S.

    Earlier this year, Abrego Garcia was again arrested by ICE, before being deported to El Salvador in March, as part of a high-profile deportation effort that sent several hundred Venezuelan and Salvadoran men accused of having gang ties to the CECOT prison. The Trump administration conceded in federal court that the deportation had been a mistake due to the 2019 withholding of removal order but Abrego Garcia nevertheless remained detained in El Salvador for months. 

    After being returned to the U.S. in June, Abrego Garcia was held in federal criminal custody, pending the start of his trial. After a federal judge in Tennessee ordered his release from pre-trial detention later in the summer, he was able to see his U.S. citizen child and wife in Maryland over a weekend. But his freedom was short-lived. In late August, Abrego Garcia was instructed to check in to the ICE field office in Baltimore, where he was again taken into custody. 

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  • Justice Dept. seeks to deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia to Liberia – WTOP News

    In a filing with a federal judge in Maryland, the Justice Department said Friday the Trump administration is seeking to deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia to Liberia.

    Kilmar Abrego Garcia, the man who was mistakenly deported by the Trump administration to El Salvador, continues to fight in court against his potential deportation to a third country. CBS News’ Camilo Montoya-Galvez reports.

    ▶ Watch Video: Kilmar Abrego Garcia fight deportations plans

    Washington — The Justice Department said Friday that the Trump administration is seeking to deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia to Liberia and said the West African nation has agreed to accept him.

    In a filing with a federal judge in Maryland, Justice Department lawyers said that immigration officials expect to formally notify Abrego Garcia later Friday that Liberia has been designated as the new country of removal. They said the Trump administration expects to be able to deport Abrego Garcia as soon as Oct. 31.

    The administration has “received diplomatic assurances regarding the treatment of third-country individuals removed to Liberia from the United States and are making the final necessary arrangements for [Abrego Garcia’s] removal,” they wrote.

    In the court filing, the Justice Department said that Abrego Garcia had identified more than 20 countries that he fears would persecute or torture him if he were removed there, and Liberia is not on the list.

    “Liberia is a thriving democracy and one of the United States’s closest partners on the African continent,” they wrote.

    Simon Sandoval-Moshenberg, Abrego Garcia’s attorney, said the administration “has chosen yet another path that feels designed to inflict maximum hardship.”

    “Their actions are punitive, cruel and unconstitutional,” Sandoval-Moshenberg said. “Unless Liberia guarantees that it will not re-deport Mr. Abrego Garcia to El Salvador, then sending him to Liberia is no less unlawful than sending him directly to El Salvador a second time.”

    The Trump administration’s plan to remove Abrego Garcia to Liberia comes as the Maryland judge, Paula Xinis, is weighing whether to release the Salvadoran man from immigration custody while a challenge to the Department of Homeland Security’s ongoing efforts to deport him for a second time moves forward.

    Abrego Garcia was removed to his home country of El Salvador in March and imprisoned there despite having been granted a legal status in 2019 that prohibited the Department of Homeland Security from removing him there because of possible persecution by local gangs. An immigration official with the Trump administration admitted that Abrego Garcia’s removal to El Salvador was an error, and Xinis ordered the Department of Homeland Security to facilitate his return to the U.S.

    But immigration officials resisted doing so for months. Abrego Garcia was brought back to the U.S. in June, but only after a federal grand jury in Tennessee indicted him on two charges of human smuggling stemming from a November 2022 traffic stop.

    Abrego Garcia pleaded not guilty to the charges, and a judge in Tennessee said he should be released on bail ahead of the criminal trial, which is set to begin in January. But he remained in criminal confinement for several more weeks because his lawyers were concerned that the Trump administration would arrest him again upon his release and deport him.

    Abrego Garcia was released from the Putnam County Jail in Tennessee in August and returned to Maryland, where he has lived since coming to the U.S. illegally in 2011. Days later, he was taken into custody by immigration authorities after being summoned for an interview at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement office in Baltimore. The Trump administration notified Abrego Garcia’s lawyers he may be deported to Uganda, though Abrego Garcia expressed fear of persecution and torture, as well as a concern that the Ugandan government would send him back to El Salvador.

    Since then, the Trump administration has searched for countries to accept Abrego Garcia and has sought to remove him to the African nations of Eswatini and Ghana. Neither of those two countries nor Uganda have agreed to take him. Abrego Garcia has said he would go to Costa Rica and designated it as his preferred country of removal. While Costa Rica has indicated it would provide him refugee status or residency, a Justice Department lawyer said during a hearing earlier this month there had not been discussions about deporting him there.

    Sandoval-Moshenberg, his lawyer, reiterated on Friday that Costa Rica “remains a viable and lawful option.”

    Xinis has forbidden the Trump administration from deporting Abrego Garcia while she considers his challenge to his ongoing detention by immigration officials and the efforts to remove him again.

    WTOP Staff

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