(NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE) A Nashville judge has set a new hearing to weigh whether Tennessee officials can continue withholding immigration records tied to a May 2025 enforcement sweep by the Tennessee Highway Patrol in partnership with ICE, a case that has become a test of transparency around state-federal operations. The move follows the court’s recent decision to reject one of the state’s legal defenses—an anti-hacking claim—used to keep the identities of THP officers secret. While that argument is off the table, the judge said more legal briefing is needed before issuing a final ruling, and no final ruling has been issued as of November 10, 2025.
Origin of the dispute and the lawsuit

The dispute grew out of a lawsuit filed in August 2025 by the Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition (TIRRC) against the Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security, which oversees THP.
- TIRRC alleges the state has unlawfully withheld or heavily redacted public records—dispatch reports, photos, dash cam footage, and documents tied to the 287(g) program—despite repeated requests that began soon after the sweep.
- The coalition’s complaint argues these actions violate the Tennessee Public Records Act, the state law that gives residents a right to access government records.
What the May sweep produced and why transparency matters
According to TIRRC, the May sweep led to about 200 detentions, yet only roughly half of the people detained have been identified publicly. That gap has raised alarm among:
- Family members trying to locate loved ones
- Legal advocates attempting to confirm counsel and filings
- Faith groups and community organizations monitoring the operation
The central public-policy question: How much visibility should the public have into immigration enforcement carried out with state resources?
“Tennesseans have a legal right to access information about government actions,” said Lisa Sherman Luna, TIRRC’s executive director. The coalition says it is committed to ensuring immigrant rights are protected.
Legal posture: what’s been decided and what remains
The attorney general’s office has not prevailed on every front. The judge dismissed the anti-hacking justification, which narrowed the state’s defenses. However:
- The court emphasized it will hear additional arguments before deciding whether more names, footage, and documents must be released.
- A new hearing has been scheduled so the state can present further legal reasoning to keep certain immigration records and officer identities confidential.
This next hearing could shape how future open-records requests involving THP and ICE are handled.
Practical stakes for immigrant families and advocates
For families, the consequences are immediate and practical:
- Without basic details—who was detained, where they were taken, and what charges—families struggle to locate relatives and secure lawyers.
- Advocates say the lack of clarity makes it harder to monitor whether due process is being followed.
- Even partial information—booking numbers, locations, or agency case identifiers—can be decisive in obtaining prompt legal help.
Advocates warn that excessive secrecy can hide potential mistakes, such as wrongful detentions or improper transfers, and erode public trust in both THP and ICE.
The 287(g) context and accountability concerns
The lawsuit spotlights the limits of public access when state officers assist federal authorities under 287(g), which allows local or state officers to perform certain federal immigration functions under ICE supervision.
- That framework can blur recordkeeping and accountability lines.
- Requests for details after joint operations often encounter roadblocks, with agencies citing safety, privacy, or investigatory needs.
- The judge faces pressure to define where transparency ends and enforcement confidentiality begins—particularly around officer names and unedited videos.
Court process and timeline
A concise timeline of events:
- May 2025: THP/ICE sweep occurs.
- Records requests begin soon after the sweep.
- August 2025: TIRRC files suit citing months of denials or heavy redactions.
- Fall 2025: Court trims at least one justification (anti-hacking claim).
- As of November 10, 2025: A new hearing is set; no final ruling has been issued.
The renewed hearing will be in Davidson County Chancery Court, where the judge is expected to probe the state’s remaining arguments for withholding.
State’s asserted reasons for secrecy vs. coalition’s pushback
The state has referenced broader legal grounds for secrecy, commonly pointing to exemptions that protect:
- Active investigations
- Personnel safety
- Private or sensitive data
TIRRC counters that such exemptions should be applied narrowly and supported by clear factual evidence. Advocates argue overbroad secrecy risks concealing errors and undermines accountability.
Potential outcomes and wider implications
- If the judge mandates greater access: expect detailed public review as advocates and families sift through logs, videos, and lists of names—leading to follow-up reporting and potential reforms in recordkeeping.
- If the court upholds secrecy: the coalition could appeal, keeping the debate alive over how much the public can see during state-federal immigration enforcement.
Whichever way the court rules, the decision in Davidson County Chancery Court will set an important precedent for future requesters seeking transparency when state and federal officers carry out immigration enforcement on Tennessee roads.
Key takeaways
- The case centers on requests for dispatch logs, photographs, dash cam footage, documents tied to the 287(g) partnership, and officer names.
- The judge dismissed the anti-hacking defense but has not issued a final ruling as of November 10, 2025.
- A new hearing will determine whether remaining records must be released, with implications for families, advocates, and future transparency around joint state-federal enforcement operations.
This Article in a Nutshell
A Davidson County judge scheduled a new hearing to assess whether Tennessee can keep withholding records from a May 2025 THP/ICE enforcement sweep after TIRRC sued in August 2025. The court dismissed the state’s anti-hacking defense but asked for additional legal briefing; no final ruling was issued as of November 10, 2025. The case seeks dispatch logs, photos, dash-cam footage and 287(g) documents tied to roughly 200 detentions and could set a precedent on transparency for joint state-federal immigration operations.
