Judge orders Trump administration to admit roughly 12,000 refugees
[May 06, 2025]
By GENE JOHNSON
SEATTLE (AP) — A judge on Monday ordered the Trump administration to
admit some 12,000 refugees into the United States under a court order
partially blocking the president's efforts to suspend the nation's
refugee admissions program.
The order from U.S. District Judge Jamal Whitehead followed arguments
from the Justice Department and refugee resettlement agencies over how
to interpret a federal appeals court ruling that significantly narrowed
an earlier decision from Whitehead.
During a hearing last week, the administration said it should only have
to process 160 refugees into the country and that it would likely appeal
any order requiring it to admit thousands. But the judge dismissed the
government's analysis, saying it required “not just reading between the
lines” of the 9th Circuit's ruling, "but hallucinating new text that
simply is not there.”
“This Court will not entertain the Government’s result-oriented
rewriting of a judicial order that clearly says what it says,” Whitehead
wrote Monday. “The Government is free, of course, to seek further
clarification from the Ninth Circuit. But the Government is not free to
disobey statutory and constitutional law — and the direct orders of this
Court and the Ninth Circuit — while it seeks such clarification.”
The refugee program, created by Congress in 1980, is a form of legal
migration to the U.S. for people displaced by war, natural disaster or
persecution — a process that often takes years and involves significant
vetting. It is different from asylum, by which people newly arrived in
the U.S. can seek permission to remain because they fear persecution in
their home country.

Upon beginning his second term on Jan. 20, President Donald Trump issued
an executive order suspending the program.
That triggered a lawsuit by individual refugees whose efforts to
resettle in the U.S. have been halted as well as major refugee aid
groups, who argued that they have had to lay off staff. The groups said
the administration froze their funding for processing refugee
applications overseas and providing support, such as short-term rental
assistance for those already in the U.S.
Whitehead, a 2023 appointee of former President Joe Biden, blocked
enforcement of Trump's order, saying it amounted to an “effective
nullification of congressional will” in setting up the nation’s refugee
admissions program.
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals largely put Whitehead's decision
on hold in March, finding that the administration was likely to win the
case given the president's broad authority to determine who is allowed
to enter the country.
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Signs are seen as Tshishiku Henry, a former refugee and Washington
State Delegate for the Refugee Congress, speaks during a rally
outside the U.S District Court after a federal judge blocked
President Donald Trump's effort to halt the nation's refugee
admissions system, Feb. 25, 2025 in Seattle. (AP Photo/Ryan Sun,
File)

But the appeals court also said the government should continue
processing those who had already been approved for travel to the
U.S., some of whom had upended their lives abroad by selling
property or quitting their jobs. Such people had relied on promises
made by the federal government that they would be admitted, the
court found.
The appeals court said the government must continue processing
refugees who already had “arranged and confirmable” travel plans
before Jan. 20 to come to the U.S. The Justice Department put the
number of refugees in that category at about 12,000.
During a hearing last week over how to interpret and enforce the
appeals court ruling, Justice Department lawyer David Kim said the
government took it to mean that the only refugees who should be
processed for entry to the U.S. are those who were scheduled to
travel to the U.S. within two weeks of Trump's order. There were far
fewer refugees who met that definition — just 160, the department
said.
The judge and lawyers for refugee resettlement organizations
disagreed with the government's reading. They noted that nothing in
the 9th Circuit's order suggested a two-week window. Instead,
Whitehead said, the order should apply to any refugees who had been
approved to come to the U.S. and had established travel plans —
regardless of when that travel was scheduled for.
Whitehead ordered the administration within the next seven days to
instruct agency offices and staff, including U.S. embassies, to
resume processing the cases of refugees who are protected by the
court order. He also told the government to immediately take steps
to facilitate admission to the U.S. for those refugees whose
clearances, including medical and security authorizations, have not
yet lapsed.
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