Your loved one’s habeas petition was filed weeks ago. Today, a federal judge will hear it. You have done the hard part of finding a lawyer and gathering documents. A different question is on your mind now: what is going to happen inside that courtroom?
Walking into federal court for a habeas corpus hearing is intimidating. In 2026, families across the country are sitting in those benches in record numbers. According to ProPublica’s habeas tracker, more habeas petitions have been filed in the first thirteen months of the second Trump administration than in the previous three administrations combined. Most succeed. But success is easier to absorb when you know what you are walking into.
This guide walks through who will be in the courtroom, what happens at each stage, what the judge can order, and how your family can prepare. If you are not yet sure what a habeas petition is, start there. This article picks up after the petition has been filed.

Does Every Habeas Petition Get a Hearing?
The short answer is no. Many habeas petitions are decided “on the papers,” meaning the judge rules based on the written petition, the government’s response, and any attached exhibits, without ever holding a live hearing. Whether your loved one’s case includes a hearing depends on what kind of dispute is involved.
Federal habeas procedure is governed by 28 U.S.C. § 2243. Once a petition is filed, the court issues either the writ itself or an “order to show cause” directing the government to explain why detention is lawful. The government files its response (called a “return”) within three days, although courts routinely allow up to twenty days for good cause. The statute then calls for a hearing within five days of the return, unless the case can be resolved on legal questions alone.
In practice, most ICE detention habeas cases turn on legal questions: did ICE classify the detainee correctly? Does the relevant statute authorize this detention? Has the duration crossed a constitutional line? When the dispute is purely legal, the judge often skips the live hearing. Live hearings happen mainly when there are factual disputes: about the conditions of detention, the timeline of custody, or events that contradict ICE’s account.
The practical takeaway: ask your attorney early whether the case is likely to go to a hearing, and if so, when.
Who Will Be in the Courtroom
If a hearing is scheduled, the courtroom will feel different from an immigration court. Federal courtrooms are larger, more formal, and operate under stricter procedures. The people you will see fall into four roles.
The Federal Judge
The judge presiding over a habeas hearing is an Article III federal judge, appointed for life and independent of any executive-branch agency. This is the central reason habeas works as a remedy: unlike immigration judges, who are part of the Department of Justice and bound by agency policy, a federal district judge answers only to the Constitution and federal law. The judge has broad authority (release, bond hearing orders, conditional writs) and is not constrained by ICE’s classification of the case.
The Government Lawyer (DOJ or DHS Attorney)
The lawyer defending the detention is usually an Assistant U.S. Attorney from the local U.S. Attorney’s Office, occasionally joined by a DHS attorney from the Office of the Principal Legal Advisor. Their job is to justify the legal basis for continued custody. ABA Journal reported in February 2026 that the volume of immigration habeas cases has reached a point federal judges themselves describe as unsustainable.
Your Attorney
Your attorney will be the most active advocate in the room. They drafted the petition, know the record cold, and will make the live arguments. Federal habeas litigation is a specialized practice. Most immigration attorneys do not regularly appear in federal district court, so working with counsel who has done this before makes a meaningful difference.
The Detainee (Sometimes by Video, Sometimes Not at All)
Section 2243 says the person detained must be physically produced “unless the application for the writ and the return present only issues of law.” In ICE detention cases, that exception is the rule. Most live habeas hearings proceed with the detainee appearing by video link from the detention facility, or not appearing at all, with counsel arguing the legal record on their behalf.
The Hearing’s Structure Step by Step
A typical habeas hearing in an ICE detention case takes thirty to ninety minutes. The structure is consistent across federal districts.
1. Opening Statements
Your attorney usually goes first, with a brief opening that frames the legal theory and the relief requested. Federal judges expect lawyers to get to the point quickly, often within five to ten minutes. The government’s lawyer responds with their own opening, summarizing why detention should continue.
2. Government’s Response to the Petition
By the time of the hearing, the government has already filed its written return. The hearing version is a sharpened oral argument: the AUSA explains why the detention statute applies, why due process has been satisfied, and why the petition should be denied. Expect references to specific provisions of the Immigration and Nationality Act and to circuit precedent.
3. Evidence and Witnesses
Most ICE habeas hearings rely on documents alone: declarations from the detainee or family, immigration judge and BIA decisions, A-file extracts, and any timeline exhibits attached to the petition. Live witness testimony is uncommon. When witnesses do appear, they are often family members testifying about community ties, or medical professionals testifying about detention conditions.
4. Legal Arguments
This is where the case is decided. The judge typically asks pointed questions about jurisdiction, the right respondent, and the constitutional standard governing prolonged detention. Both attorneys answer in turn. Strong attorneys come prepared and treat the hearing less like an opening argument than like a graduate seminar.
5. The Judge’s Decision: Immediate or Written Later
Some judges rule from the bench at the end of the hearing, particularly when the law is settled and the facts are clear. More commonly, the judge takes the matter under advisement and issues a written order in the days or weeks that follow. National Immigration Litigation Alliance’s 2025 practice advisory notes that written rulings often arrive within seven to twenty-one days.
If you are reading this because a habeas hearing is days away for someone you love, the most useful thing you can do right now is talk to counsel who has done these cases before. Federal court does not forgive late filings or missed procedural steps.
Call (862) 799-2200 for a same-day case review, or send your loved one’s details here.
How to Prepare: What Your Family Should Bring
The legal heavy lifting belongs to your attorney, but families have a role too. Showing up prepared signals to the judge that the detainee has support and a place to return to.

- The detainee’s A-Number and the exact name of the detention facility.
- Copies of any prior immigration court or BIA decisions, especially the bond hearing record.
- A written timeline of detention, with dates of arrest, transfers, and prior custody reviews.
- Letters of support from family, employers, religious leaders, or community members. These matter most if the judge orders an immediate bond hearing.
- If a translator is needed, request one through the court clerk well in advance.
- Arrive at least forty-five minutes early. Federal security screening is slower than state courts.
What the Judge Can Order
Federal judges have broader authority than many families expect. A win at a habeas hearing can take several different forms.
- Outright release. The judge orders the government to release the detainee, sometimes with conditions like supervised release or GPS monitoring. This happens when ICE lacked legal authority to detain in the first place, or when continued detention has become punitive.
- An ordered bond hearing. The most common outcome in 2026. The judge does not release the detainee directly, but orders that an immigration judge conduct an individualized bond hearing within seven to twenty-one days. This is the relief most often granted in cases involving denied bond hearings.
- A conditional writ. A middle path many families have never heard of. The judge orders the government to take a specific action (provide a hearing, transfer custody, correct a procedural defect) within a set number of days, or release the detainee.
- Denial of the petition. The judge rules that the detention is lawful. The case ends, though appeal options remain.
If You Lose the Hearing: Appeal Options
A denial in district court is not the end. The losing party can appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the circuit covering the district where the petition was filed: the Ninth Circuit for cases out of Tacoma’s Western District of Washington, the Third Circuit for New Jersey, the Fifth Circuit for Texas and Louisiana. A notice of appeal must be filed within thirty days of the district court’s order.
Two practical realities matter. First, the detainee usually remains in custody during the appeal unless a separate motion for release pending appeal is filed and granted. Second, circuit appeals can take months. For families dealing with prolonged detention, an appeal is often less attractive than a renewed habeas filing based on new facts. Discuss both paths with your attorney before deciding.
Real Example: A Hearing That Led to Release
The Northwest ICE Processing Center in Tacoma, Washington, is the only long-term immigration detention facility in the Pacific Northwest. According to InvestigateWest’s February 2026 reporting, more than one hundred new habeas petitions were filed against detentions at Tacoma in January 2026 alone. One case shows what a successful hearing can look like.
A Colombian asylum seeker had crossed the southern border, applied for asylum, and received a Withholding of Removal grant in July 2025. That decision protected him from being deported to Colombia. Yet ICE continued holding him at Tacoma for another six months, well past the point where any removal could realistically happen. His total custody crossed the thirteen-month mark.
His family worked with counsel to file a habeas petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2241 in the Western District of Washington. The argument was straightforward: with a Withholding of Removal grant on the record, the government could not articulate a lawful basis for ongoing detention. After the hearing, the federal judge ordered relief, and he was released. It was the first night his family had spent with him in over a year. Gozel Law’s case write-up describes this case among others where habeas turned a stalled detention into a release.
The hearing itself took less than an hour. But that hour was the turning point of the case.
The Hearing Is the Moment That Changes Things
For families with a loved one in ICE custody, a habeas corpus hearing is the rare moment when the system has to answer for itself. A federal judge, independent, life-tenured, accountable to no agency, sits down and asks the government a simple question: why are you still holding this person? The answer either holds up or it does not.
Walking into that courtroom is easier when you know what to expect: who will be in the room, how the hearing is structured, what the judge can and cannot order, and that even if the first hearing does not go your way, the road does not end there.
Legal Disclaimer
This article is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Every immigration case has unique circumstances. For legal guidance specific to your situation, we recommend consulting with an experienced immigration attorney. The information in this article reflects laws and policies as of the publication date; subsequent changes may affect its accuracy.
Sources
- 28 U.S. Code § 2243 – Issuance of writ; return; hearing; decision, Cornell Legal Information Institute. Current statutory text governing federal habeas hearing procedure.
- 28 U.S. Code § 2241 – Power to grant writ, Cornell Legal Information Institute. Federal jurisdiction statute for habeas petitions, including immigration detention cases.
- Habeas Corpus Petitions Practice Advisory, National Immigration Litigation Alliance, January 15, 2025.
- Tracking the Historic Rise of Habeas Cases Filed by Detained Immigrants, ProPublica habeas tracker, data current as of April 27, 2026.
- Amid Trump immigration crackdown, Texas habeas cases surge, The Texas Tribune and ProPublica, February 10, 2026.
- Rising immigration-related caseload is ‘not sustainable,’ federal judges say, ABA Journal, February 17, 2026.
- Federal judges say immigrants detained without due process, InvestigateWest, February 11, 2026.
- Immigration Bond & Habeas Corpus: Securing Release from ICE, Gozel Law Firm, 2026.
Every day in detention is a day away from your family.
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