Judge refuses to block new DHS policy limiting Congress members' access
to ICE facilities
[January 20, 2026]
By MICHAEL KUNZELMAN
WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal judge refused Monday to temporarily block
the Trump administration from enforcing a new policy requiring a week's
notice before members of Congress can visit immigration detention
facilities.
U.S. District Judge Jia Cobb in Washington, D.C., concluded that the
Department of Homeland Security didn't violate an earlier court order
when it reimposed a seven-day notice requirement for congressional
oversight visits to Immigration and Customs Enforcement facilities.
Cobb stressed that she wasn't ruling on whether the new policy passes
legal muster. Rather, she said, plaintiffs' attorneys representing
several Democratic members of Congress used the wrong "procedural
vehicle" to challenge it. The judge also concluded that the Jan. 8
policy is a new agency action that isn't subject to her prior order in
the plaintiffs' favor.
Plaintiffs' lawyers asked Cobb to intervene after three Democratic
members of Congress from Minnesota were blocked from visiting an ICE
facility near Minneapolis earlier this month — three days after an ICE
officer shot and killed U.S. citizen Renee Good in Minneapolis.
Last month, Cobb temporarily blocked an administration oversight visit
policy. She ruled Dec. 17 that it is likely illegal for ICE to demand a
week’s notice from members of Congress seeking to visit and observe
conditions in ICE facilities.
A day after Good’s death, U.S. Department of Homeland Security Secretary
Kristi Noem secretly signed a new memorandum reinstating another
seven-day notice requirement. Plaintiffs’ lawyers from the Democracy
Forward legal advocacy group said DHS didn't disclose the latest policy
until after U.S. Reps. Ilhan Omar, Kelly Morrison and Angie Craig
initially were turned away from an ICE facility in the Minneapolis
federal building.

On Monday, Cobb ruled that the new policy is similar but different than
the one announced in June 2025.
“The Court emphasizes that it denies Plaintiffs’ motion only because it
is not the proper avenue to challenge Defendants’ January 8, 2026
memorandum and the policy stated therein, rather than based on any kind
of finding that the policy is lawful,” she wrote.
Democracy Forward spokeswoman Melissa Schwartz said they were reviewing
the judge's latest order.
“We will continue to use every legal tool available to stop the
administration’s efforts to hide from congressional oversight,” she said
in a statement.
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Rep. Kelly Morrison D-Minn., center, Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn.,
second from the right, and Rep. Angie Craig, D-Minn., far right, at
the Bishop Whipple Federal Building, Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026, in
Minneapolis. (AP Photo/Adam Gray)

Twelve other Democratic members of Congress sued in Washington to
challenge ICE’s amended visitor policies after they were denied
entry to detention facilities. Their lawsuit accused Republican
President Donald Trump’s administration of obstructing congressional
oversight of the centers during its nationwide surge in immigration
enforcement operations.
A law bars DHS from using appropriated general funds to prevent
members of Congress from entering DHS facilities for oversight
purposes. Plaintiffs’ attorneys from the Democracy Forward
Foundation said the administration hasn’t shown that none of those
funds are being used to implement the latest notice policy.
"Appropriations are not a game. They are a law," plaintiffs’
attorney Christine Coogle said during a hearing Wednesday.
Justice Department attorney Amber Richer said the Jan. 8 policy
signed by Noem is distinct from the policies that Cobb suspended
last month.
“This is really a challenge to a new policy,” Richer said.
Plaintiffs' attorneys said the matter is urgent because members of
Congress are negotiating funding for DHS and ICE for the next fiscal
year with DHS’s annual appropriations due to expire Jan. 30.
“This is a critical moment for oversight, and members of Congress
must be able to conduct oversight at ICE detention facilities,
without notice, to obtain urgent and essential information for
ongoing funding negotiations,” the lawyers wrote.
Government attorneys have said it’s merely speculative for the
legislators to be concerned that conditions in ICE facilities change
over the course of a week. But the judge rejected those arguments
last month.
“The changing conditions within ICE facilities means that it is
likely impossible for a Member of Congress to reconstruct the
conditions at a facility on the day that they initially sought to
enter,” wrote Cobb, who was nominated to the bench by Democratic
President Joe Biden.
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