U.S. Appeals Court Requires Bond Reviews for Long ICE Detention
A U.S. appeals court requires ICE to provide bond hearings after 90 days, putting detention authority against due-process protections.

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Is the U.S. appeals court handling ICE detention fairly given the 90-day hearing rule?
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Context
In the United States, a U.S. appeals court ruled that ICE must allow bond hearings after 90 days of detention. The decision reaches noncitizens held in immigration detention and the federal authorities and operators responsible for that system.
Requiring a chance to seek release strengthens due-process protections, while continued detention without a mandatory hearing preserves broader enforcement discretion. The ruling's operative threshold is 90 days of detention before a bond hearing must be available.
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