A federal appeals court ruled on Tuesday the Trump administration can resume an expedited deportation process nationwide for those not apprehended at the southern border.
What is the expedited process?
The fast-track procedure is typically used on those who were apprehended shortly after crossing the southern border. The process removes people who cannot prove they have been in the country for at least two years and are apprehended in the country. The process does not require immigration hearings and is now allowed to be used nationwide.
What are people saying?
- U.S. Court of Appeals: “For many years, while some were designated, others were not. But that changed in January 2025 when the executive expanded expedited removal to the maximum extent allowed by Congress."
In a 2-1 vote, the federal appeals court panel ruled the Trump administration can expand the expedited deportation procedure. The court ruled it did not violate immigrants' rights to expand the process within the limits of the law.
Since the policy was first implemented in 1996, Congress would delegate to the executive to designate who warrants an expedited deportation.
“For many years, while some were designated, others were not. But that changed in January 2025 when the executive expanded expedited removal to the maximum extent allowed by Congress," Judge Justin Walker wrote on behalf of the three-person panel.
In early 2025, Trump ordered the policy to be enacted in full force as part of his executive order titled "Protecting the American People Against Invasion".
The President's expanded policy encourages agents to rapidly remove those who cross the southern border and those found in the United States interior in order to decrease the illegal immigrant population.

