We’re in the fight of our lifetime against the Trump administration. Help fuel our urgent work to protect civil liberties in 2026 and beyond. Donate by 12/31.
The ACLU sued ICE in June 2017 on behalf of Iraqi residents and their families in the U.S., after ICE agents arrested more than 100 Iraqi nationals without warning — including many who came to the U.S. as children and who’ve lived in the U.S. for decades — in raids throughout Metro Detroit.
About
In 2017 hundreds of Iraqis in Michigan and throughout the country were arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), which intended to deport them immediately to Iraq. Most had been living in the United States for decades, but were previously ordered deported, either for technical immigration violations or for past convictions. Because the Iraqi government had long refused to issue travel documents for potential deportees, the United States has been unable to deport them. But when Iraq agreed to accept some U.S. deportees, suddenly all 1400 Iraqis with an old deportation order were targets.
The ACLU filed a class action lawsuit in federal court to stop the deportations on the grounds that they would likely result in persecution, torture or death for those deported. In 2017 Judge Mark Goldsmith issued a preliminary injunction barring deportation of Iraqis while they access the immigration court system, giving them time to file motions to reopen their immigration cases based on the changed country conditions or legal developments in the decades since their cases were decided. Subsequent orders in 2018 required the government to provide Iraqis with bond hearings and release those who had been detained longer than six months, freeing hundreds of people from detention.
The government appealed, and in decisions in December 2018 and January 2020 the Sixth Circuit reversed, each time by a vote of 2-1. Despite the legal setbacks in the Sixth Circuit, the case allowed hundreds of Iraqis to access the immigration court system, as well as to fight their immigration case from home, rather than in detention. Many are winning their immigration cases, and some have even become citizens. But a few have been deported, and one of our clients, Jimmy Al Dauod, died in Iraq.
After several years of negotiations, the case settled and the court approved the settlement at a July 2024 fairness hearing. The settlement limits when and for how long class members can be detained and provides other important protections like ensuring that seeking to adjust one’s immigration status is not a basis for detention.
Resources for Iraqi Immigration Defense
To support Iraqis fighting removal, we have put together a resource bank of expert declarations, briefs, sample pleadings, opinions, and other materials. That is accessible here.
Legal Team
Hamama v. Adducci; ACLU of Michigan Attorneys Miriam Aukerman, Ewurama Appiagyei-Dankah, Ramis Wadood, Bonsitu Kitaba-Gaviglio, Dan Korobkin, Monica Andrade, and Elaine Lewis; National ACLU Attorneys Lee Gelernt, Judy Rabinowitz, and Anand Balakrishnan; Cooperating Attorneys Margo Schlanger of U-M Law School, Kimberly Scott, Wendy Richards, Sarah Reasoner and Erika Giroux of Miller Canfield, with support from Katie Witowski and Kacey O’Neill, David Johnson, Linda Goldberg, and William Swor; and Co-counsel Nadine Yousif and Nora Youkhana of CODE Legal Aid, Susan Reed and Ruby Robinson of the Michigan Immigrant Rights Center, and Mariko Hirose of the International Refugee Assistance Project.
Affiliate: MI
Download documentAffiliate: MI
Download documentAffiliate: MI
Download documentAffiliate: MI
Download documentAffiliate: MI
Download documentAffiliate: MI
Download documentAffiliate: MI
Download documentAffiliate: MI
Download documentAffiliate: MI
Download documentAffiliate: MI
Download documentAffiliate: MI
Download documentAffiliate: MI
Download documentAffiliate: MI
Download documentAffiliate: MI
Download documentAffiliate: MI
Download documentAffiliate: MI
Download documentAffiliate: MI
Download documentAffiliate: MI
Download documentAffiliate: MI
Download document
Sign up to be the first to hear about how to take action.
By completing this form, I agree to receive occasional emails per the terms of the ACLU’s privacy statement.
By completing this form, I agree to receive occasional emails per the terms of the ACLU’s privacy statement.