(GEORGIA, UNITED STATES) A federal judge in Georgia has ordered a bond hearing for a detained immigrant, directly rejecting a recent ruling by the nation’s top immigration appeals court that sought to bar such hearings for undocumented people arrested inside the United States. U.S. District Judge Clay D. Land’s order requires an individualized bond hearing for a detainee identified in court filings as J.A.M., allowing a judge to assess whether release conditions are appropriate rather than leaving the person in open-ended immigration detention.
The decision pushes back against the Board of Immigration Appeals’ ruling in the 2025 case known as the Matter of Yajure Hurtado, which declared that immigration judges could not grant bond hearings to anyone present in the country without having been formally admitted. In that decision dated September 5, 2025, the BIA stated:
“Immigration Judges lack authority to hear bond requests or to grant bond to aliens who are present in the United States without admission,”
a sweeping interpretation that critics say could affect millions of people who entered without inspection, including long-settled residents. Judge Land’s order means that, at least in this Georgia case, a detainee arrested inside the country must first receive a hearing before an immigration judge can decide release terms.

Local outlet WRBL summarized the directive plainly: “Judge Land ordered a bond hearing for J.A.M. to assess release conditions,” setting up a direct confrontation between a federal district court and the BIA over whether immigration judges retain any role in reviewing custody for undocumented people picked up away from the border. The order requires an individualized assessment instead of indefinite detention under the administrative policy that the BIA attempted to cement in Matter of Yajure Hurtado.
The BIA’s 2025 decision sparked immediate controversy among immigration lawyers, civil rights groups, and some federal judges, who viewed it as an attempt to shut down a crucial safety valve in the immigration detention system. Legal experts and immigrant advocates have called Yajure Hurtado a “radical departure from 28 years of established practice” and a move that “creates a constitutional crisis that federal courts are unlikely to tolerate.” They argue that for nearly three decades, people arrested inside the United States by immigration authorities have had a chance to ask an immigration judge for bond, unless a separate statute explicitly mandated detention for serious crimes or national security reasons. By declaring that immigration judges lack authority across the board for those without formal admission, the BIA sought to reclassify a wide swath of interior arrests into a category that forecloses bond consideration.
The American Civil Liberties Union, which has brought a series of challenges in federal courts around the country, says the government’s attempt to deny bond hearings by labeling interior arrests as though they were border apprehensions under § 1225 violates long-standing law.
“Federal courts across the country… have found the government’s attempt to deny bond hearings by misclassifying people under § 1225 to be unlawful,”
the ACLU said, adding that cutting off bond review “violates due process and upends nearly 30 years of established practice.” In Massachusetts, Daniel McFadden, managing attorney at the ACLU of Massachusetts, framed the issue in simple terms that echo through cases like J.A.M.’s:
“When the government arrests any person inside the United States, it must be required to prove to a judge that there is an actual reason for the person’s detention. Our client and others like him have a constitutional and statutory right to receive a bond hearing for exactly that purpose.”
McFadden’s name is bolded on first mention.
Immigration attorneys say the policy change reverberates well beyond the courtroom. Without bond hearings, long-time residents with U.S.-citizen relatives can be held for weeks or months with no chance to argue for release while their cases proceed.
“ICE’s current refusal to provide bond hearings for detained clients violates due process… The people impacted by this policy are neighbors, friends, and family members, living peacefully in the United States and making important contributions to our communities,”
said immigration attorney Annelise Araujo. Cases like J.A.M.’s illustrate how a single bond hearing can determine whether someone fights their case from home or from a detention center far from their family and counsel.
Judge Land’s ruling comes amid a wave of similar decisions. Federal courts in Washington, Colorado, and Massachusetts have recently sided with detainees challenging blanket denials of bond hearings, finding that the government’s approach is likely unlawful and may breach constitutional protections against arbitrary detention. While each case turns on its own facts, the pattern underscores a growing judicial resistance to eliminating individualized review for people arrested inside the country who are not charged with serious crimes. The Georgia order puts another marker down, signaling that district courts will scrutinize any move that removes a judge’s ability to weigh risk and flight concerns before detention continues.
At the heart of the legal fight is a simple question: when immigration authorities arrest someone inside the United States, can the government hold that person without giving a judge a chance to consider release? For decades, the answer in most interior cases has been yes, a bond hearing is available, with an immigration judge weighing flight risk and public safety. Matter of Yajure Hurtado attempted to upend that norm by saying that anyone “present in the United States without admission” falls outside immigration judges’ bond authority altogether. The stakes are high because that category is vast—it includes people who crossed the border years ago and have since built lives, as well as people arrested during routine check-ins or workplace encounters.
The Georgia case does not rewrite national policy, but it ensures J.A.M. will have a hearing where the government must explain why detention should continue and where defense counsel can present evidence of community ties, employment history, or other factors. The order also sends a broader message to detention facilities and immigration courts in the Southeast that federal judges are watching closely. Advocates say those hearings matter because they inject an element of judicial oversight into a system that otherwise operates inside administrative walls. When an immigration judge sets a bond or decides on alternative conditions like check-ins or ankle monitors, the person can return home while their case works through a crowded docket—often a process that takes months or longer.
The BIA’s view places heavy weight on immigration statutes that govern people at or near the border, particularly those assigned to expedited removal under § 1225. Critics argue the government has stretched that category inside the country, labeling people found far from the border as if they had just arrived, then invoking Yajure Hurtado to avoid bond review. The ACLU points to rulings where judges have rejected that strategy, noting that interior arrests typically fall under different detention provisions that have long been understood to allow immigration judges to hold bond hearings unless specific mandatory detention rules apply.
Lawyers and community groups see a direct human cost when bond hearings are blocked. Detention often makes it hard to secure counsel, gather documents, or even stay in touch with family. Some facilities are hours away from cities where relatives live or where attorneys practice. Weekend calls are limited, and transferring detainees between facilities can disrupt cases. For people with health issues or caregiving responsibilities, every added day in custody deepens the strain. The Georgia ruling does not resolve those wider issues, but it gives one detainee a chance to argue for release and may influence how local authorities handle similar cases.
The legal clash over Yajure Hurtado also highlights the role of the Board of Immigration Appeals, the body that sets nationwide precedents for immigration courts. Its decisions bind immigration judges unless a federal court intervenes, which is why district court rulings like Judge Land’s carry weight even if they do not apply broadly by themselves. Attorneys say the board’s attempt to eliminate bond hearings for a vast group of people risks inviting more federal court involvement. If more judges follow Georgia, Washington, Colorado, and Massachusetts in granting relief, immigration authorities may face a patchwork of rulings, prompting higher courts to step in or the administration to revise guidance.
The Trump administration has leaned on mandatory detention authorities to expand interior enforcement, and opponents view the BIA’s 2025 ruling as part of that approach. The Georgia order adds to a growing judicial backlash against the expanded use of mandatory detention for undocumented immigrants arrested inside the country, particularly those without serious criminal histories. While administration officials have argued that restricting bond hearings reduces absconding and improves removal outcomes, courts are increasingly focused on whether due process allows detention to proceed without a chance for individualized review.
For now, the next step in Georgia is straightforward: schedule and hold a bond hearing for J.A.M. In that setting, the immigration judge will consider whether the person poses a flight risk or a danger to the community, and whether bond or other conditions can reasonably ensure appearance at future hearings. If the judge sets a bond amount, the detainee or family must post it for release; if the judge denies bond, an appeal within the immigration system may follow. Those are familiar mechanics to immigration practitioners, but they had been thrown into doubt by the sweeping language of Yajure Hurtado until federal courts began weighing in.
The case also raises practical questions for detention centers and attorneys across the Southeast. If immigration judges resume hearing bond requests for people arrested in the interior, court calendars will adjust and detainees may get earlier access to counsel. If the Department of Homeland Security argues that certain detainees still fall outside bond authority, further litigation is likely. Judges in different districts may reach different conclusions, creating an uneven landscape until appellate courts or the Supreme Court resolves the conflict. For communities where immigration detention is a major employer, policy shifts can ripple locally as well, altering facility populations and services.
Advocates say the underlying principle is simple: even in civil immigration proceedings, people living in the United States should not be detained without a chance to ask a judge for release. The ACLU’s position, echoed by other groups, is that due process does not permit prolonged detention by executive fiat alone. Their court filings cite decades of practice and a range of cases where federal judges required the government to justify custody. Opponents of bond hearings counter that immigration is a civil system distinct from criminal law and that Congress has granted the executive broad authority to detain in order to carry out removal. The Georgia decision places those arguments in sharp relief by insisting that at least one detainee, arrested inside the country, must receive a day in court.
Judge Land’s order arrives at a moment when immigration courts are facing heavy caseloads and policy whiplash. Changes in guidance can alter outcomes across thousands of cases, and rulings like Matter of Yajure Hurtado reverberate far beyond a single docket. With litigation active in multiple states, federal judges are taking a closer look at how immigration agencies classify arrests and assign detention authority. If those courts continue to require bond hearings for interior arrests, the BIA may have to revisit its approach or risk further defeats.
The Justice Department, which oversees immigration courts and the BIA, has not said whether it will appeal the Georgia order. For now, the decision ensures that J.A.M. will stand before an immigration judge who can weigh release conditions and set terms if appropriate. That is the basic function of a bond hearing, and in Georgia it will go forward despite the BIA’s attempt to close the door. As the legal fight unfolds, the question in case after case will be the same: can the government continue to detain someone arrested inside the United States without first convincing a judge that custody is necessary?
For readers seeking official information on the immigration courts and the appeals board that issued Matter of Yajure Hurtado, details are available from the Department of Justice’s Board of Immigration Appeals.
This Article in a Nutshell
U.S. District Judge Clay D. Land ordered a bond hearing for detainee J.A.M., rejecting the BIA’s 2025 Matter of Yajure Hurtado decision that sought to bar bond hearings for people present without admission. The order requires individualized judicial review of release conditions and challenges a policy critics say could affect millions. The ruling follows similar federal decisions in multiple states and underscores judicial resistance to eliminating bond review for interior arrests.