DHS policy to block unannounced lawmaker visits upheld, for now, on technical grounds

Minnesota Democratic U.S. Reps. Kelly Morrison, Ilhan Omar and Rep. Angie Craig arrive outside the regional Immigration and Customs Enforcement headquarters at the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building in Minneapolis on Jan. 10, 2026. The lawmakers were denied entry to Β the facility where the Department of Homeland Security has been headquartering operations in the state. (Photo by Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)
WASHINGTON β A Department of Homeland Security policy that barred unannounced visits for lawmakers seeking to conduct oversight at facilities that hold immigrants will remain in place, as ordered by a federal judge Monday.
District of Columbia federal Judge Jia Cobb issued an order that denied a request from a dozen Democratic lawmakers, on the technical grounds that an amended complaint or a supplemental brief must be made to challenge a seven-day notice policy instituted by Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem this month for oversight visits.
βThe Court emphasizes that it denies Plaintiffsβ motion only because it is not the proper avenue to challenge Defendantsβ January 8, 2026 memorandum and the policy stated therein, rather than based on any kind of finding that the policy is lawful,βΒ according to Cobbβs order.
Earlier this month, DemocratsΒ brought an emergency request to Cobb after a handful of Minnesota lawmakers were denied an unannounced oversight visit to a federal facility that holds immigrants following the deadly shooting of a woman in Minneapolis by a federal immigration officer.
Under a 2019 appropriations law, any member of Congress can carry out an unannounced visit at a federal facility that holds immigrants, but in June, multiple Democrats were denied visits to Immigration and Customs Enforcement facilities.Β
Those 12 Democrats sued over the policy that required a weekβs notice, and in December, Cobb granted the request to stay Noemβs policy, finding it violated the 2019 law.Β
Noem has now argued that the January incident does not violate Cobbβs stay from December, because the ICE facilities are using funds through the Republican spending and tax cuts law, known as the βOne, Big Beautiful Bill,β and not the DHS appropriations bill. Noem argued that those facilities are therefore exempt from unannounced oversight visits by members of Congress.Β
House Democrats who sued include Joe Neguse of Colorado, Adriano Espaillat of New York, Jamie Raskin of Maryland, Robert Garcia of California, J. Luis Correa of California, Jason Crow of Colorado, Veronica Escobar of Texas, Dan Goldman of New York, Jimmy Gomez of California, Raul Ruiz of California, Bennie Thompson of Mississippi and Norma Torres of California.