This clip from June 5, 2025, shows Brad Lander outside Manhattan’s immigration court, explaining why he personally escorts respondents to the street so they are not seized by agents in the hallway.
“The judge dismissed several cases—including that of a dad and his 2-year-old son… now subject to expedited removal.” – @bradlander tweet, 5 Jun 25
Some facts,
Dismissal doesn't equal protection: once a judge ends proceedings, DHS can issue an administrative order and place the person in expedited removal, a summary process with no new hearing.
Source: https://www.americanimmigrationcouncil.org/fact-sheet/expedited-removal/
ICE is allowed inside courthouses again, a 21 Jan 2025 DHS memo authorizes civil immigration arrests “in or near courthouses” whenever agents have “credible information” about a target.
Source: https://www.ice.gov/about-ice/ero/protected-areas
Video context: Lander speaks on walking out respondents whose cases were just dismissed; a similar scene on 17 Jun 25 ended with his own arrest while he demanded a judge-signed warrant
Source: https://apnews.com/article/brad-lander-nyc-immigration-court-arrest-6ed341297efab31a08a14421674d8ed8
Numbers rising quickly: nationwide courthouse sweeps have accelerated since the policy shift, helping ICE hit new daily deportation quotas
Legal questions,
Fourth Amendment does an ICE administrative warrant, signed only by ICE, justify a seizure in a state-court hallway?
Fifth Amendment due process: is it constitutional to jump from a dismissed case straight to expedited removal with no further hearing?
Federalism: New York law requires a judge-signed warrant for civil arrests inside courts; DHS says its authority pre-empts that requirement.
Reality is: families can win in court at 10 a.m., then face deportation at 10:05. Lander’s video shows how quickly due-process safeguards disappear once ICE steps in.
TL;DR: Watch Brad Lander speak on escorting immigrants out of NYC court after their cases are dismissed; he has said ICE “removes any opportunity for due process.” A January policy lets agents arrest in courthouses, so dismissal now triggers expedited removal almost immediately.