ICE removed Luis Gerardo Pelaez Llivichuzca, a citizen of Ecuador with a final order of removal wanted by his home country for murder, to Ecuador on March 25.
A split Ninth Circuit panel has refused to block an injunction compelling the Trump administration to reinstate about 16,000 probationary employees to six federal agencies, saying the administration will likely lose its argument that the agencies weren't acting on an order from above when they fired the workers.
U.S. immigration officials told a federal judge Thursday that a detained Tufts University graduate student was moved out of Massachusetts prior to a court order that she remain in the state.
A record criminal resolution with a tree trimming company accused of knowingly employing unauthorized workers in 2017 may provide clues as to how the U.S. Department of Justice’s immigration crackdown will touch American companies, which should prepare now for potential enforcement actions, says Jonathan Porter at Husch Blackwell.
With six baseball fantasy experiences under my belt, I've learned time and again that I didn't make the wrong career choice, but I've also learned that baseball lessons are life lessons, and I'm a better lawyer for my time at St. Louis Cardinals fantasy camp, says Scott Felder at Wiley.
A coalition of legal services providers asked a California federal judge to overturn the Trump administration's decision to cut funding aimed at ensuring thousands of unaccompanied immigrant children have access to legal assistance, alleging that it violates federal laws and regulations.
A biofuel business' holding company's inability to hire a domestic worker to manage an executive's new South Dakota estate doesn't demonstrate a "one-time" or "temporary need" allowing it to tap a foreign worker, a U.S. Department of Labor appeals board judge ruled.
A National Labor Relations Board judge has approved a $225,000 settlement in a case accusing a nonprofit immigration legal services agency of illegally discharging an attorney, bringing an end to a year-old challenge to the lawyer's December 2023 firing.
WilmerHale became the fifth large law firm to be on the receiving end of an executive order restricting its ability to practice law, with President Donald Trump on Thursday targeting the firm over its ties to former special counsel Robert Mueller as well as its immigration pro bono work and diversity practices.