The U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments this fall on a 2024 Second Circuit decision concerning prolonged detention of noncitizens by ICE. The case centers on due process claims in removal proceedings involving individuals with prior criminal convictions. All specific case details originate from a single right-leaning outlet and remain unverified.
The review tests whether due process protections apply to noncitizens in prolonged detention, prioritizing safeguards against arbitrary enforcement amid case backlogs.
“Liberty interests of long-term residents outweigh expedited removal without hearings”
Conservative
The appeal challenges judicial expansion of rights that delays deportation of criminal noncitizens and undermines congressional removal authority.
“Sovereignty and public safety require swift enforcement over individualized hearings”
Libertarian
The case examines whether courts are creating new entitlements that constrain executive removal power while still acknowledging basic procedural limits on detention.
“Negative liberty of citizens balanced against statutory authority for holding removable noncitizens”
Devil's Advocate
All views rest on unverified single-source claims and overlook statutory interpretation questions under precedents like Demore v. Kim or the role of ICE processing delays.
“Shared reliance on unverified facts distorts the statutory and administrative nature of the dispute”