A panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit ruled on April 24 that the government cannot deny asylum seekers the right to apply for asylum simply because they arrive at the southern border. The court rejected the Trump administration’s policy based on an Inauguration Day proclamation describing an “invasion” at the US–Mexico border, which had been used to justify summary deportations without access to asylum procedures. The ruling reaffirmed that US immigration law guarantees the right to seek asylum for all foreign nationals present in or arriving in the United States unless explicitly restricted by statute.
The court found that the government’s approach unlawfully attempted to suspend this right through executive action, stating that immigration law does not permit the President to create summary removal procedures that bypass asylum protections. As a result, the decision blocks ongoing deportations carried out under the contested policy and reinforces that individuals must be given access to the asylum process before removal decisions are made.
The ruling comes against the backdrop of reports from advocacy organizations documenting how asylum seekers from countries including Iran, Russia, China, Afghanistan, and Cameroon were allegedly denied access to asylum procedures after crossing the border. Many were reportedly detained, transported in custody, and removed to third countries without being allowed to present their claims. These accounts include testimonies from individuals who said they were told that asylum had been effectively ended and that they would be deported without review of their protection claims.
Human rights advocates highlighted cases such as that of a 27-year-old Iranian woman who said she repeatedly requested asylum but was not given the opportunity to do so. The court’s decision now prevents such summary deportations from continuing under the challenged policy, although it does not automatically restore access for individuals who were previously removed.
While the ruling does not require the return of those already deported, it strongly affirms that the executive branch cannot suspend or override the statutory right to seek asylum. The decision underscores that US law guarantees access to asylum procedures and limits the government’s ability to implement blanket border policies that bypass established legal protections.







