Immigration lawyers decry cutoff of legal help as Trump administration ramps up raids
Activists protest the agenda of President Donald Trump during a rally near the water tower on the Magnificent Mile on Jan. 25, 2025, in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)
WASHINGTON — Immigration attorneys Monday detailed the impact on their clients, some of them undocumented children, after the Trump administration last week halted Department of Justice programs that fund nonprofits that provide legal services to immigrants.
Meanwhile, over the weekend, the federal government began moving in earnest on President Donald Trump’s campaign pledge of an immigration crackdown. Highly publicized immigration enforcement raids took place across the country, including close to 1,000 arrests, and the president nearly entered into a trade war with Colombia over using military aircraft in deportation flights.
“This administration has made very clear that it wants to mass deport as many people as possible,” Michael Lukens, Amica Center for Immigrant Rights, said during a press conference with reporters about the defunded DOJ programs.
Immigration attorneys at the Acacia Center for Justice on Wednesday received an email about a temporary pause on four of their programs DOJ funds: the Legal Orientation Program; the Immigration Court Helpdesk; the Family Group Legal Orientation Program; and the Counsel for Children Initiative. The Acacia Center for Justice is a nonprofit that provides legal services to immigrants at risk of detention or deportation.
“Mass deportation starts with mass detention, and if you have detention numbers going up and nobody to help, you’re essentially setting up black sites around the country where there is no rule of law, where there is no transparency or accountability, and this is just unacceptable,” Lukens said.
Those legal service providers help immigrants navigate immigration court proceedings and paperwork, but they are not personal attorneys, as immigrants are not guaranteed a lawyer under U.S. law.
It’s not the first time a Trump administration has tried to bar legal services for immigrants, said Azadeh Erfani with the National Immigrant Justice Center in Chicago. The first Trump administration did so in 2018 and was eventually sued.
“The Trump administration is inviting another lawsuit to be launched imminently by the community of legal service providers,” Erfani said. “It is simply unconscionable to defund these services at a time where the administration is conducting mass raids and further swelling the immigration court backlog that already nears 4 million people.”
Lawsuits abound
Pausing funding for those legal services is the latest in various immigration decisions from the Trump administration.
Many of the new Trump policies have been met with a swift legal backlash.
State attorneys general have sued over an executive order ending the constitutional right of birthright citizenship, and on Monday, a coalition of Quakers sued the U.S. Department of Homeland Security over its new guidance to allow immigration enforcement in sensitive locations that include places of worship.
In Tucker, Georgia, Immigrations Customs and Enforcement arrested a man while he was attending a church service, a pastor told CNN.
Arrests in Chicago
On Sunday, ICE officials said in a statement they began “conducting enhanced targeted operations today in Chicago to enforce U.S. immigration law and preserve public safety and national security by keeping potentially dangerous criminal aliens out of our communities.”
ICE said it made 956 arrests on Sunday, but did not specify the location where those arrests took place or if those people who were arrested already had court-ordered removal requests in place.
ICE did not respond to States Newsroom’s request for more information regarding the raids.
Trump’s border czar, Tom Homan, was in Chicago overseeing the ICE enforcement.
“These raids are going to go on throughout the country, we’re not going to let up,” Homan said Monday on Fox News. “We put our foot on the gas and we’re gonna go.”
Phil McGraw, also known as T.V. personality Dr. Phil, someone who is neither a law enforcement officer nor a medical doctor, accompanied Homan on the arrests in Chicago. In one video, McGraw is seen asking a man arrested if he is a U.S. citizen and where he was born.
Homan is expected to work closely with former South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem. The U.S. Senate on Saturday confirmed Noem to lead the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.
“One of my top priorities is achieving President Trump’s mandate from the American people to secure our southern border and fix our broken immigration system,” Noem said in a statement following her confirmation.
That enforcement can include involvement from several agencies within the U.S. Department of Justice. Former acting DHS Secretary Benjamine Huffman last week expanded immigration enforcement abilities to the U.S. Marshals, Drug Enforcement Administration and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
Immigration enforcement operations over the weekend were also reported in Denver, Colorado; Atlanta, Georgia; Puerto Rico; and Austin, Texas.
Tariff tiff
Trump on Sunday held off on levying tariffs on goods from Colombia, after Colombian President Gustavo Petro agreed to take deported nationals. At issue was the use of military aircraft to return Colombian nationals and the treatment of those people, Petro wrote on social media.
“The United States must establish a protocol for the dignified treatment of migrants before we receive them,” he wrote.
Trump threatened he would place a 25% tariff — that would be raised to 50% after one week — on all goods coming into the U.S. from Colombia. Trump also said he would implement a travel ban and revoke visas of Colombian government officials.
“These measures are just the beginning,” Trump wrote on social media. “We will not allow the Colombian Government to violate its legal obligations with regard to the acceptance and return of the Criminals they forced into the United States.”
Late Sunday, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement that the Colombian government had agreed to accept deported nationals on military aircraft.
“Based on this agreement, the fully drafted IEEPA tariffs and sanctions will be held in reserve, and not signed, unless Colombia fails to honor this agreement,” Leavitt said. “The visa sanctions issued by the State Department, and enhanced inspections from Customs and Border Protection, will remain in effect until the first planeload of Colombian deportees is successfully returned.”