Ordered free, still locked up: Judges fume as Trump administration holds ICE detainees

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Judge Troy Nunley was fed up.Federal immigration officials had once again flouted his authority by keeping a man locked up in a California City detention center after Nunley ordered him released.

When he was finally set free, the man was booted onto the street with no passport, driver’s license or other personal effects.The judge’s demand that the items be returned were met with silence.

And so on Tuesday, Nunley, the chief judge of the Eastern District of California, slapped Department of Justice attorney Jonathan Yu with an official sanction and a $250 fine.In a scathing order, Nunley laid out why he was compelled to take such a rare step.

The fine may have been less than some traffic tickets, but it’s nearly unheard for a judge to formally admonish a government lawyer.By Yu’s own admission, he was drowning in work.

In his order, Nunley recounted the attorney’s claim he’d been assigned more than 300 nearly identical cases in the last three months, all of immigrants in detention who argued they were being held without cause.Court filings show many California cases involve longtime U.S.

residents unexpectedly hauled off to jail after routine check-ins with immigration officials.One was an Afghan who’d helped the American war effort.

Another a Cambodian grandmother of eight who fled Pol Pot’s killing fields as a girl nearly 50 years ago.California ICE on Thursday arrested a plaintiff involved in a class action lawsuit challenging Los Angeles immigration raids, prompting concerns from lawyers of retaliation and calls for his release.Until last year, most would have fought deportation on bond after a brief hearing with an immigration judge.

Now, their only hope of release is to file a petition for writ of habeas corpus — a legal maneuver once typically reserved for death row inmates and suspected terrorists — inundating the country’s busiest federal court...

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Publisher: Los Angeles Times

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