Courts rejects Trump administration request to revoke some migrants’ protected status
Share and Follow


A federal appeals court rejected the Trump administration’s request to revoke the temporary legal status of nearly a million migrants living in the country.

In an order Monday, the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals declined to put a hold on a judge’s order that stopped the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) from terminating parole protections for people who entered the country through the CBP One app.

DHS’s move would have revoked legal status for nearly a million people who came to the U.S. under the Biden administration. Of the roughly 985,000 migrants who used the app, many were often permitted to seek asylum and given a temporary work authorization. 

The three-judge panel in Boston, comprised of appointees of Democratic presidents, said DHS Secretary Kristi Noem has not made a “strong showing” that the termination of the parole for the migrants is “likely to be sustained on appeal.” 

Noem has not shown the “balance of harms and the public interest weigh so heavily in her favor to warrant a stay of the district court order pending the outcome of this appeal in the absence of a strong showing that the Secretary will prevail,” the panel wrote. 

District Judge Indira Talwani halted DHS’s action on April 25, which she said revoked protections without the necessary case-by-case review process. 

The Hill has reached out to DHS for comment, but a spokesperson told Reuters that the administration is “committed to restoring the rule of law to our immigration system.” 

“No lawsuit, not this one or any other, is going to stop us from doing that,” spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said. 

The administration had begun sending email notices to impacted migrants telling them to self-deport through the new version of the app, now called CBP Home. 

Migrant rights advocates filed a lawsuit challenging DHS’s order. Karen Tumlin, a lawyer for immigrant rights group Justice Action Center that pursued the case, celebrated the appeal’s court decision. She called DHS’s action “reckless and illegal,” Reuters reported. 

The administration may now take the case to the Supreme Court to intervene. 

Share and Follow
You May Also Like

At least 20 injured after ‘vehicle ploughs into crowd’ in Los Angeles with five fighting for life

AT least 20 people have been injured by a vehicle that ploughed…

Who is new Astronomer CEO Pete DeJoy? Interim tech boss stepping in for Andy Byron after Coldplay ‘kiss cam’ saga

ASTRONOMER has appointed a new interim CEO following a viral “kiss cam”…

Trump Hints at Release of 10 Additional Hamas Hostages During Friday Night Dinner at White House

Trump made the comment during a dinner with lawmakers at the White…

America has a birthing problem — let’s make maternal care more accessible  

Why is it so expensive to give birth in America? In a…

Inside sick ‘child fight clubs’ where gangs lure teens into savage street brawls for cash & leave kids dead or maimed

ON the streets of Brazil, children as young as 11 are pitted…

Moment fire tears through primary school as pupils are evacuated across playing field on last day of term

THIS is the horrifying moment a fire tore through a primary school…

Dad named Andy Byron bombarded with cruel messages after being mistaken for tech CEO at centre of Coldplay kiss cam saga

A MAN with the same name as “cheating” CEO Andy Byron had…

Fridge-raiding Kim Jong-un ‘sparing no expense’ to get hands on Ozempic – but he’ll test on guinea pig civilians first

KIM Jong-un is “sparing no effort or expense” to get his hands…