Detention et Caution
Quelqu'un que vous aimez a ete arrete par ICE. Vous ne savez pas ou il est ni comment le faire sortir. On le trouve, on lui rend visite, et on se bat pour le ramener chez vous pendant que son dossier avance.
Family Member Detained?
If a loved one has been taken into ICE custody, time is critical. We can help locate them, assess their case, and fight for their release.
How We Get People Out
ICE wants to hold them. We want them home. Here's every tool we use to make that happen.
Bond Hearings
Your loved one shouldn't have to sit in a cell while their case drags on. We fight to get them out on bond—showing the judge they'll show up for court and they're not dangerous. We've brought people home.
- Build the strongest case for release
- Letters from family, employers, community
- Prove they're not a flight risk
- Argue in front of the judge
Habeas Corpus Petitions
Bond denied? No bond available because of 'mandatory detention'? We take it to federal court. We've gotten people released who ICE wanted to hold forever. Sometimes the only answer is a federal judge telling them to let go.
- Federal court when immigration court fails
- Challenge illegal detention
- Constitutional rights arguments
- Emergency motions when it can't wait
Custody Redetermination
Things change. New evidence shows up. The first hearing didn't go well. We can ask for another shot at bond. Sometimes you just need a second chance with better preparation.
- Changed circumstances arguments
- New evidence presentation
- Re-argue flight risk
- Better documentation this time
ICE Check-In Representation
ICE check-ins are terrifying. You walk in not knowing if you'll walk out. We go with you. If they try to take you, we're already there fighting. Don't go alone.
- We come with you to the appointment
- Prepare you for their questions
- Push back against detention
- If they take you, we're already on it
What the Judge Wants to Know
Bond comes down to two questions. We prepare evidence that answers both.
Will They Show Up?
The judge wants to know: if we let them out, will they come back for court dates? We prove they have too much to lose by running—family, job, home, community.
Favorable Factors
Are They Dangerous?
Criminal history gets scrutinized. But context matters—how long ago, how serious, what's happened since. We tell the full story, not just the charges.
Favorable Factors
When Immigration Court Isn't Enough
The immigration judge says no bond. Or there's no bond hearing available under INA § 236(c) "mandatory detention." ICE wants to hold them indefinitely. That's when we go to federal court and file a habeas corpus petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2241, asking a federal judge to overrule it.
The Supreme Court in Zadvydas v. Davis, 533 U.S. 678 (2001), held that indefinite detention raises serious constitutional concerns. We've used this precedent to get people released who'd been locked up for months, even years. The Fifth Amendment's Due Process Clause still applies in immigration detention. Sometimes we have to remind the government of that.
Featured in Media
"U.S. Agrees to Free Stowaway"
Joshua Bardavid secured release of a long-term immigration detainee through habeas litigation.
— New York Times
"Close Call for Haitian Caught in Web"
Bardavid negotiated client's release by filing habeas corpus, securing freedom before planned deportation.
— New York Times
Where We Go
We visit detention facilities regularly. If your loved one is held at one of these places—or anywhere else—we can help.
They Took Someone You Love
You're scared. You're angry. You don't know what to do. Call us. We'll find out where they are, what's happening, and start fighting to bring them home.