Guerrero Orellana v. Hyde, et. al.

  • Filed: September 25, 2025
  • Status: Active
  • Court: U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts
  • Latest Update: Sep 25, 2025
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In September 2025, the ACLU of Maine, together with several partners, filed a class action lawsuit in federal court to challenge the widespread denial of bond hearings to people detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. As the complaint demonstrates, this denial upends decades of settled law and established practice in immigration proceedings.

Dec. 19, 2025 Update

The court ruled that the Trump administration unlawfully denied bond hearings to potentially thousands of people in New England who were arrested and detained by ICE. The Trump administration upended decades of standard immigration procedures and violated the clear language of federal law by jailing people and denying them the chance to challenge their indefinite detention. The court's Dec. 19 order is clear: no administration is above the law. The government cannot arrest and detain people indefinitely without providing them with a hearing before a judge.

The case was filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts by the ACLU, ACLU of Maine, ACLU of Massachusetts, ACLU of New Hampshire, law firm Araujo and Fisher, law firm Foley Hoag, and the Harvard Immigration and Refugee Clinic.

The complaint alleges that the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Justice recently and abruptly began to misclassify people arrested by ICE inside the United States. DHS and DOJ started systematically reclassifying these people from the statutory authority of 8 U.S.C. § 1226, which usually allows for the opportunity to request bond during removal proceedings, to the no-bond detention provisions of 8 U.S.C. § 1225, which does not apply to people arrested in the interior of the United States and placed in removal proceedings.

This case is brought on behalf of Jose Arnulfo Guerrero Orellana and a putative class of similarly situated individuals. Mr. Guerrero Orellana has been living in the United States for over a decade. He brings this case to vindicate his own right to a bond hearing — where an immigration judge can determine whether his detention is justified to protect the community or ensure his appearance in court — and that of thousands of other detainees in Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Maine, and New Hampshire who will be denied the opportunity to seek release on bond under the new legal ruling adopted by the executive branch. The complaint alleges that the government's new policy violates constitutional and statutory due process rights as well as the Administrative Procedure Act.

Case Number:
1:25-cv-12664-PBS
Attorney(s):
Daniel McFadden, Jessie Rossman, Adriana Lafaille, Julian Bava (ACLU of Massachusetts); My Khanh Ngo, Michael Tan (ACLU); Gilles Bissonnette, SangYeob Kim, Chelsea Eddy (ACLU of New Hampshire); Carol Garvan, Max Brooks (ACLU of Maine)
Pro Bono Firm:
Foley Hoag, Araujo and Fisher
Partner Organizations:
ACLU Immigrrants' Rights Project, ACLU of Massachusetts, ACLU of New Hampshire, Harvard Immigration and Refugee Clinical Program
Where it started
  • 12/19/2025 Order Declaring Trump Administration is Violating Due Process
  • 11/07/2025 Proposed Order
  • 11/03/2025 Status Conference
  • 10/30/2025 Class Certification
  • 10/14/2025 Arguments for Class Certification
  • 10/10/2025 Status Report
  • 09/30/2025 Preliminary Injunction
  • 09/22/2025 Initial Filings

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