08/11/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 08/12/2025 12:56
Reporting from THE CITY's Gwynne Hogan and Haidee Chu reveals that half of all immigration courthouse arrests across the U.S. earlier this summer were in Manhattan, making New York City the nation's capital for such arrests. They found that the surge in ICE courthouse arrests beginning in late May has made courthouse arrests 14 times more common in New York City than in the country as a whole.
Allison Cutler, Supervising Attorney in NYLAG's Immigrant Protection Unit, spoke with THE CITY on what she's seen unfold in recent months:
"We very quickly saw on the ground that the procedural posture didn't actually matter," said Allison Cutler, supervising attorney at the New York Legal Assistance Group. She is one of a handful of attorneys keeping watch on the courthouse arrests, and attempts to advise people without lawyers of their rights as they're rushed away.
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Meanwhile, immigration judges and court staff in New York are grappling with a grim new normal, with each of them struggling to work out the rules for their courtrooms.
A former New York immigration judge, who called fairness "the guiding star" of the system, called the shift in tactics deeply troubling and unprecedented.
Read the full story in THE CITY, originally published on August 11, 2025.
Chart: Haidee Chu / THE CITY
Source: Court data via Executive Office of Immigration Review; ICE arrest data via Deportation Data Project
Elizabeth Jois, Supervising Attorney with NYLAG's Special Litigation Unit, spoke with WCNY's "Capitol Pressroom" radio program on the legal settlement in the CDPAP lawsuit brought forth by NYLAG and Patterson Belknap.
Melissa Chua, Co-Director of NYLAG's Immigrant Protection Unit, spoke with The Nation about how courthouse ICE arrests undermine due process.
NYLAG Vice President Shani Adess joined 51% host Jesse King to discuss domestic violence law and what survivor-centered and trauma informed advocacy looks like in navigating New York's legal system.
NYLAG client Derlis, an 11th-grader in Ridgewood, Queens, reunited with his family on July 18 after a month-long ICE detention in Texas.
NYLAG and Envision Freedom Fund secure the release of Derlis, a Queens student, and Edwin, a man with developmental and auditory disabilities, from ICE detention.
The City's proposed FY26 budget includes $74.7 million for immigration legal services - a lifeline for NYLAG's work in this dire moment.