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Immigration Law

Habeas Corpus Attorneys in Tulsa, Oklahoma Serving Clients Nationwide

Our habeas corpus attorneys at Rivas & Associates help detained immigrants challenge unlawful or prolonged detention and ask a federal court to order their release. When Immigration and Customs Enforcement holds someone for months without a bond hearing, or keeps a person detained when there is no real chance of removal anytime soon, a petition for a writ of habeas corpus can be the fastest way back in front of a judge. Rivas & Associates is an immigration law firm in Tulsa, Oklahoma serving clients nationwide with a bilingual, Spanish-speaking team.

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Our Habeas Corpus Lawyers in Tulsa, Oklahoma Help Detained Immigrants Nationwide Challenge Unlawful Detention

Being held in immigration detention is frightening, and the uncertainty is often the hardest part. You may not know how long you will be held, whether you will get a bond hearing, or who is even reviewing your case. A petition for a writ of habeas corpus asks a federal judge to look at one question directly: is the government holding you lawfully? If the answer is no, the court can order your release or order a hearing that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) tried to deny you.

Our habeas corpus lawyers at Rivas & Associates represent detained immigrants and their families across the United States. The writ of habeas corpus is one of the oldest protections in American law, and it lives in the U.S. Constitution. In the immigration setting it is usually filed in federal district court under 28 U.S.C. § 2241, and it can be a powerful option when the immigration court and ICE will not agree to release or a bond hearing.

If you or a loved one is detained and you believe the detention has gone on too long or should never have happened, contact Rivas & Associates to schedule a confidential consultation by calling (844) 37-RIVAS(844) 37-RIVAS or filling out our online form. The majority of our legal team consists of immigrants and first-generation Americans. We understand your concerns, and we are here to help you. Hablamos español.

Key Takeaways

  • A writ of habeas corpus lets a detained person ask a federal court to decide whether their detention is lawful
  • Immigration habeas petitions are usually filed in federal district court under 28 U.S.C. § 2241
  • Prolonged detention after a final removal order may be challenged when removal is not likely in the reasonably foreseeable future
  • A petition can ask the court to order release or to order a bond hearing that was denied
  • Rivas & Associates represents detained clients nationwide and reviews each detention situation individually

What Is a Writ of Habeas Corpus in Immigration Cases?

Habeas corpus is Latin for “you shall have the body.” In practice it is a way to bring the government before a judge and require it to justify why a person is being held. In immigration cases, the petition is normally brought against the officials responsible for the detention, such as the facility warden and ICE leadership, and it is filed in the federal district where the person is detained.

A habeas petition is not the same as your removal case in immigration court. Immigration court decides whether you can stay in the country. A habeas petition focuses on the detention itself, meaning whether the government has legal authority to keep you locked up while your case moves forward. That distinction matters, because a person can have a strong reason to remain in the United States and still be held for months under conditions that a federal court may find unlawful.

When You Can File a Habeas Corpus Petition

Every case is different, and the right strategy depends on your specific facts. Our attorneys at Rivas & Associates often consider a habeas petition in situations such as the following.

Prolonged Detention After a Final Order of Removal

When a person has a final order of removal, ICE generally has authority to detain them while it arranges the removal. That authority is not unlimited. In Zadvydas v. Davis, the U.S. Supreme Court held that detention after a final order cannot continue indefinitely and recognized six months as a presumptively reasonable period. After that, if you can show there is no significant likelihood of removal in the reasonably foreseeable future, the burden shifts to the government to justify continued detention. This often comes up when a home country will not issue travel documents or will not accept the person back.

Detention Without a Bond Hearing

Some people are held for long stretches without ever seeing a judge about release. When the immigration system does not provide a timely bond hearing, a habeas petition can ask a federal court to order one, so that a neutral decision maker actually weighs whether you are a flight risk or a danger to the community.

Challenging Mandatory Detention

Certain detention is labeled “mandatory” based on a person’s history or the category they fall into. These classifications are sometimes applied too broadly or incorrectly. A habeas petition can challenge whether mandatory detention truly applies to you and whether you are entitled to an individualized hearing.

Unlawful or Improper Detention

Detention can be unlawful for other reasons, including detention of someone who has a valid claim to U.S. citizenship, detention that ignores a court order, or detention that violates due process. When the basic legal authority to hold you is missing, habeas corpus is often the right tool to raise it.

Where an Immigration Habeas Petition Is Filed

Immigration habeas petitions are generally filed in the federal district court that covers the location where the person is detained, not in immigration court. Because detention facilities are spread across the country and people are sometimes transferred between them, identifying the correct court and the correct respondents is an important early step. Our attorneys handle this carefully so the petition is filed in the right place and is not delayed by technical problems.

What Relief a Habeas Corpus Petition Can Provide

A habeas petition does not decide your immigration case, but it can change your circumstances in meaningful ways while that case continues. Depending on the facts, a federal court may:

  • Order your release from detention, sometimes with conditions of supervision
  • Order a bond hearing before an immigration judge
  • Find that continued detention is no longer authorized after a final order
  • Require the government to justify why it is still holding you

Release from detention can let you return to your family, keep your job, and prepare your immigration case from outside a facility, which often makes a real difference in the case itself.

Habeas Corpus and Immigration Bond Are Not the Same Thing

Many detained people first try to get released through an immigration bond hearing. That is the right path in many cases. A habeas petition becomes important when bond is not available, when bond was denied, or when detention has continued so long that it raises a separate legal problem. In some situations the two work together, and a habeas petition is the vehicle that forces the bond hearing to happen. Our lawyers can review which option fits your circumstances during your consultation.

How Our Habeas Corpus Attorneys Can Help You

Habeas litigation is time sensitive and detail driven, and a small mistake can cost weeks that a detained person does not have. At Rivas & Associates, we move quickly and handle the work that gives a petition its best chance. Depending on your situation, our attorneys may:

  • Review the detention to determine whether it is lawful and how long it has lasted
  • Identify the correct federal court and the proper respondents
  • Gather records of detention, removal status, and efforts to remove you
  • Prepare and file the petition and supporting documentation
  • Argue for your release or for a bond hearing before a federal judge
  • Coordinate the habeas case with your ongoing immigration matter

We represent clients nationwide, with many originally from Mexico or from throughout Central America and South America. The majority of our staff consists of immigrants or first-generation Americans, so we understand your situation on a personal level. We are here to help you.

Schedule a Consultation with Rivas & Associates About Challenging Detention

If you or someone you love is detained and you have questions about a writ of habeas corpus, do not wait to get answers. Detention cases move on tight timelines, and starting early gives our attorneys more room to act. We will review the details of the detention, explain your options in plain language, and tell you honestly whether a habeas petition is the right step.

Schedule a confidential consultation today by calling Rivas & Associates at (844) 37-RIVAS(844) 37-RIVAS or filling out our online form. Empowering Immigrants, Building Futures! Hablamos español.

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Frequently Asked Questions About Habeas Corpus

Yes. Rivas & Associates represents detained immigrants and their families nationwide and reviews each detention situation individually to determine whether a habeas corpus petition or another option is the best path.

Depending on the facts, a federal court may order release, sometimes with conditions of supervision, or order that a bond hearing take place before an immigration judge. The court can also find that continued detention is no longer authorized after a final order.

It is generally filed in the federal district court that covers the place where the person is detained, not in immigration court. Identifying the correct court and the proper respondents is an important early step, especially when someone has been transferred between facilities.

The Supreme Court in Zadvydas v. Davis recognized six months as a presumptively reasonable period to carry out removal after a final order. After that, if you can show there is no significant likelihood of removal in the reasonably foreseeable future, the government must justify why it is still holding you.

A habeas petition is often considered when detention has continued for a long time, when no bond hearing has been provided, when mandatory detention may be applied incorrectly, or when removal is not likely in the reasonably foreseeable future. An attorney can review your specific facts to decide whether it is the right step.

A writ of habeas corpus is a request asking a federal court to decide whether the government has legal authority to detain a person. In immigration cases it is usually filed under 28 U.S.C. Section 2241 and focuses on the lawfulness of the detention, not on whether the person can remain in the United States.

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