Volunteers flock to immigration courts to support migrants arrested in the hallways
Source: ABC News/AP
July 20, 2025, 8:38 AM
SEATTLE -- After a Seattle immigration judge dismissed the deportation case against a Colombian man exposing him to expedited removal three people sat with him in the back of the courtroom, taking his car keys for safe-keeping, helping him memorize phone numbers and gathering the names of family members who needed to be notified. When Judge Brett Parchert asked why they were doing that in court, the volunteers said Immigration and Custom Enforcement officers were outside the door, waiting to take the man into custody, so this was their only chance to help him get his things in order. "ICE is in the waiting room?" the judge asked.
As the mass deportation campaign of President Donald Trump focuses on cities and states led by Democrats and unleashes fear among asylum-seekers and immigrants, their legal defenders sued this week, seeking class-action protections against the arrests outside immigration court hearings. Meanwhile, these volunteers are taking action.
A diverse group faith leaders, college students, grandmothers, retired lawyers and professors has been showing up at immigration courts across the nation to escort immigrants at risk of being detained for deportation by masked ICE officials. They're giving families moral and logistical support, and bearing witness as the people are taken away.
The Northwest Immigrant Rights Project was inundated by so many community members wanting to help that they made a volunteer training video, created Know Your Rights sheets in several languages and started a Google sheet where people sign up for shifts, said Stephanie Gai, a staff attorney with the Seattle-based legal services non-profit. We could not do it without them," Gai said. Some volunteers request time off work so they can come in and help.
Read more: https://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/volunteers-flock-immigration-courts-support-migrants-arrested-hallways-123902561

groundloop
(13,142 posts)How a deportation case being DISMISSED opens someone up to "expedited removal".
My head is spinning, nothing makes sense anymore.
Jimi du Ranty
(17 posts)opening the way for ICE to perform an expedited removal.
link to earlier article:
https://www.democraticunderground.com/10143471944
hope this works, it is my first paste of a link here..
SunSeeker
(56,167 posts)
underpants
(191,534 posts)They dont care how it turns out legally (unlike cops and prosecutors) they just need a number of bodies each day. Yeah, we are there.
aggiesal
(10,184 posts)The Federal lawyers request the case be dismissed.
This allows the immigrant to go free.
But they don't have a chance to enjoy that freedom because ICEtopol is waiting outside.
Rep. Dan Goldman has his local office on a Federal building in NYC, where one of the immigration courts is located.
He saw what was happening, and he was not happy.
The immigrants are so happy that their case is being dismissed, but then get confused when they are stopped outside the courtroom and arrested.
Very nasty way of getting their numbers up.
coffeenap
(3,269 posts)Would they change their finding if they knew the person they thought was just given freedom was actually being captured?
SickOfTheOnePct
(7,982 posts)
asks to have it dismissed, the judge will most likely have a hard time refusing; its like any other case that prosecutors ask to have dropped.
underpants
(191,534 posts)and all the others just take care of their courtroom
bluestarone
(19,953 posts)Interfering with arrests. ( i'm no lawyer, but does ICE need a warrant to take these immigrants (released by this judge) into custody?
SickOfTheOnePct
(7,982 posts)bluestarone
(19,953 posts)releases?
SickOfTheOnePct
(7,982 posts)SickOfTheOnePct
(7,982 posts)...they may have warrants when they pick up the immigrants from court, but they don't have to have them. And based on the fact that they're waiting in the lobby rather than coming into the courtroom tells me that they most likely don't have warrants.
They can hang around in public areas of a courthouse all day long (not the courtrooms themselves), and just pick people up as they leave court if they have probable cause to believe that they are in the country illegally.