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Norms Impact

Judge Rips Stephen Miller as “Ignorant or Incompetent, or Both”

A federal court had to stop an executive-branch “arrest now, ask questions later” scheme that treated probable cause and warrants as optional in immigration policing.

Judiciary

Dec 3, 2025

Sources

Summary

U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell ruled that the Trump administration illegally lowered the legal standard for immigration arrests during the federal takeover of Washington, D.C. The ruling rejects an “arrest now, ask questions later” approach that relied on “reasonable suspicion” in place of probable cause and treated warrant requirements as optional. The decision bars warrantless immigration arrests absent probable cause that a person is unlawfully present and a flight risk.

Reality Check

This conduct threatens to normalize executive-branch arrest power untethered from probable cause, eroding the Fourth Amendment’s basic protection against arbitrary seizures and turning enforcement discretion into raw coercion. On these facts, the core problem is constitutional and institutional: a policy posture and messaging that encouraged warrantless arrests on “reasonable suspicion,” which a federal judge found illegal and enjoined. Criminal liability is not established here on the record provided; the clearer breach is an abuse-of-power pattern that invites systematic rights violations unless courts and internal safeguards force compliance.

Media

Detail

<p>In an 88-page ruling, U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell found that the Trump administration adopted an “arrest now, ask questions later” policy as part of a federal takeover of Washington, D.C., and that the policy unlawfully reduced the threshold for immigration arrests.</p><p>The ruling described how the Department of Homeland Security and administration officials asserted that “reasonable suspicion” was sufficient to arrest and that probable cause and warrants were not required. Howell cited government lawyers’ argument that the public statements underpinning the policy were made by “non-attorneys” who “don’t necessarily understand” legal terms, and responded that this defense implied the speakers were “ignorant or incompetent, or both.”</p><p>Howell cited statements including Border Patrol chief agent Gregory Bovino’s claim that “reasonable suspicion” was needed for an immigration arrest and that he did not need probable cause or a warrant, and remarks attributed to White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller urging officers to make arrests at locations such as Home Depots or 7-Elevens. Howell barred warrantless immigration arrests without probable cause that the person is in the country illegally and a flight risk.</p>