DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

DHS: No judicial warrant? No problem.

January 22, 2026
in News
DHS: No judicial warrant? No problem.

The Constitution’s protections for individual rights keep getting in the way of the Trump administration’s immigration methods.

A whistleblower’s organization representing anonymous government employees alleged this week that the acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement issued a memo in May instructing officers that they can enter a person’s home without a judicial warrant. The memo contends that officers can instead rely on a document prepared by ICE — known as an administrative warrant — after a final deportation order has been signed, typically by an immigration judge in the executive branch.

The Department of Homeland Security effectively confirmed this policy on Thursday, saying those being targeted already “had full due process” and that such warrants “have been used for decades.”

Administrative warrants are issued by the executive branch itself, not by an independent judge. They can be used to arrest immigrants in public locations. But any legal novice knows that, except in extreme circumstances, forcibly entering a person’s home without a warrant issued by a judge violates the Fourth Amendment, as the Supreme Court has repeatedly ruled.

The whistleblower report alleges that ICE agents in Texas have already started to rely on administrative warrants to arrest people in their homes, though this remains unconfirmed. If true, this represents yet another example of the administration treating constitutional rights as mere suggestions when enforcing immigration laws.

The administration has, for example, sent immigrants to be imprisoned in El Salvador without due process, which the Supreme Court later ruled was required. It has detained and sought to deport foreigners in the United States on student visas explicitly because of their political views. And who can forget President Donald Trump’s executive order attempting to end birthright citizenship, which is enshrined in the 14th Amendment?

Trump won the 2024 election on promises to pursue mass deportation, and he’s within his rights to aggressively enforce the laws. But the administration sullies that mandate every time it goes too far — especially when it reaches beyond its legal authority. The public has already soured on the administration’s crackdown. How long will it take before the president notices?

The post DHS: No judicial warrant? No problem. appeared first on Washington Post.

White House shares doctored image portraying arrested church protester in tears
News

White House shares doctored image portraying arrested church protester in tears

by Washington Post
January 22, 2026

The White House on Thursday posted an altered photo of an attorney arrested after a Minnesota church protest, edited to ...

Read more
News

House Passes Spending Package Over Democratic Revolt on ICE

January 22, 2026
News

Jim Jordan blasted over rant during Jack Smith’s Jan. 6 testimony

January 22, 2026
News

Alfred McLaren, 93, Dies; Submariner Led Secret Cold War Missions

January 22, 2026
News

Sen. Klobuchar files paperwork to run for Minnesota governor

January 22, 2026
How the middle class was hollowed out from 1979 to 2022, according to new federal data

How the middle class was hollowed out from 1979 to 2022, according to new federal data

January 22, 2026
The Cliburn, Known for Piano Competitions, Will Hold One for Conductors

The Cliburn, Known for Piano Competitions, Will Hold One for Conductors

January 22, 2026
What we learned from Elon Musk’s surprise appearance at Davos: not much

What we learned from Elon Musk’s surprise appearance at Davos: not much

January 22, 2026

DNYUZ © 2025

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2025