Tuesday, December 16, 2025

SCOTUS Signals Willingness To Side With Trump Admin In Asylum Cases Dispute: ‘It seems to me a prototypical case for the [Board of Immigration Appeals],’ Said Chief Justice Roberts

Ozzy Trevino/CBP Photography/Wikimedia Commons
SCOTUS Signals Willingness To Side With Trump Admin In Asylum Cases Dispute
‘It seems to me a prototypical case for the [Board of Immigration Appeals],’ said Chief Justice Roberts.
The U.S. Supreme Court appeared favorable to the Trump administration’s position in a high-profile asylum-related case before the bench on Monday.

During the roughly hour-long hearing, the justices heard arguments in Urias-Orellana v. Bondi. The case centers around Salvadoran national Humberto Urias-Orellana, who fled his home country and illegally entered the United States with his family in 2021 after reportedly enduring targeted violence in El Salvador.

As summarized by Oyez, upon entering America, the illegal alien and his family were charged by the Department of Homeland Security “with removability for illegal entry,” which prompted them to apply for asylum “based on persecution of their family group.” Urias-Orellana also sought “protection” under the United Nations’ “Convention Against Torture” (CAT) doctrine.
His applications were rejected by an immigration judge, who concluded that his claims did not meet the standard of what constitutes as persecution, and his “CAT claim failed because he did not report his harassment to the police and did not demonstrate that doing so would be futile,” Justia summarized.

The ruling was later upheld by the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA), which prompted plaintiffs to appeal to the First Circuit Court of Appeals for review.

The appellate court’s rejection of the petition led Urias-Orellana to appeal to SCOTUS, in which he asked the high court to address the question of “whether a federal court of appeals must defer to the BIA’s judgment that a given set of undisputed facts does not demonstrate mistreatment severe enough to constitute ‘persecution'” under the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA).

In his opening remarks, plaintiffs’ attorney Nicholas Rosellini contended that “deciding whether undisputed facts qualify as persecution under the law involves legal interpretation, not fact finding,” — “Even the BIA agrees,” he added — and therefore, cases such as Urias-Orellana’s are eligible for review by federal appellate courts.

The BIA “treats the issue as a question of law subject to de novo review. That should not change when a case reaches federal court,” Rosellini said. “Under both the INA’s text and [existing precedent], courts should decide for themselves whether undisputed facts establish persecution under the law. [Federal law] explicitly provides for legal deference on closely related issues but not this one. And decades of experience confirms that courts perform crucial legal work in applying the INA’s persecution standard. Deference to the BIA is unwarranted.”

While discussing a past Supreme Court case (INS v. Elias-Zacarias) dealing with asylum and the standard of “persecution” with Rosellini, Associate Justice Sonia Sotomayor noted that “the question is, did [Urias-Orellana] have a fear for his life?” She further asked how the Salvadoran national and his family’s circumstances are “any different from what happened in Elias-Zacarias,” in which the court held that a guerilla organization’s efforts to coerce an asylum seeker “into performing military service does not necessarily constitute ‘persecution on account of … political opinion’ under … the Immigration and Nationality Act.”

Rosellini argued that Sotomayor’s question is not what’s at issue in this matter and contended that “this is a past persecution case.”

“Under the INA, a noncitizen is presumptively eligible for asylum if they have suffered persecution in the past. It’s not this forward-looking inquiry about whether they have a well-founded fear of persecution going forward. That’s a different kind of inquiry … It involves the calculation of a future probability. And so, the case for substantial evidence review would be much stronger there,” Rosellini said. “But here … the facts of what happened to my client are undisputed. The immigration judge took his testimony as credible and true, and found that the death threats he experienced were indeed credible and menacing but nevertheless held that, under the law, they did not rise to the level of persecution.” --->READ MORE HERE

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