UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY PADUCAH DIVISION
JOSE JUAN CORONEL EVARISTO PETITIONER
v. No. 5:25-cv-215-BJB
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY, RESPONDENTS ET AL.
* * * * * OPINION & ORDER Jose Evaristo, a Mexican citizen, entered the United States without permission more than twenty years ago. Petition (DN 1) ¶ 12. And he has lived here since, under a prior Department of Homeland Security policy allowing—but not requiring—the detention of people who entered illegally and reside inside the country. He concedes, however, that he lacks lawful status in the United States. Recently, the Acting Director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement changed the agency’s policy: ICE now considers the Petitioner, and others like him, subject to mandatory detention under 8 U.S.C. § 1225(b)(2) rather than permissive detention under § 1226(a). See USA Response (DN 10) at 7–15.1 Under the new policy, immigration officers arrested the Petitioner. See Petition ¶ 5. And he has spent the past few months in Christian County Jail while his removal proceedings play out. Like many other immigration detainees who have sought habeas in recent months, the Petitioner argues that no statute authorizes—and the Constitution forbids—the Government to detain him without bond. Unlike some other detainees, however, this Petitioner adds something more: In a response to this Court’s show- cause order, he contends that because another judge has already decided it’s unlawful to detain someone in his shoes without bond, his continued detention is unlawful and
1 See also Maria Sacchetti & Carol D. Leonnig, ICE Declares Millions of Undocumented Immigrations Ineligible for Bond Hearings, WASH. POST (July 15, 2025); ICE Memo: Interim Guidance Regarding Detention Authority for Applications for Admission, AM. IMMIGR. LAWYERS’ ASS’N, Doc. No. 25071607 (July 8, 2025), https://www.aila.org/library/ice-memo- interim-guidance-regarding-detention-authority-for-applications-for-admission (supplying an apparently genuine copy of the policy memo in question, which doesn’t appear to be available on ICE’s website or in the Federal Register). violates that court order. See Response (DN 16) at 5–6. The decision in question is Bautista v. Santacruz, --- F. Supp. 3d ---, No. 5:25-cv-1873, 2025 WL 3713987 (C.D. Cal. Dec. 18, 2025). It certified a nationwide class consisting of: All noncitizens in the United States without lawful status who (1) have entered or will enter the United States without inspection; (2) were not or will not be apprehended upon arrival; and (3) are not or will not be subject to detention under 8 U.S.C. § 1226(c)[2], § 1225(b)(1)[3], or § 1231[4] at the time the Department of Homeland Security makes an initial custody determination. Bautista, 2025 WL 3713987, at *32. The District Judge entered this declaratory judgment against numerous federal defendants—all agencies or the heads of agencies involved in immigration enforcement, including three of the Respondents in these cases: Todd Lyons (the Acting Director of ICE), Kristi Noem (the Secretary of Homeland Security), and Pamela Bondi (the Attorney General).5 Those defendants opposed class certification and the declaratory judgment in the California litigation. And as Respondents in this Kentucky litigation, they opposed habeas relief—at least insofar as it might flow from Bautista—because until December 18, the Central District had not yet entered judgment. See USA Response at 19–20. Whatever the merit of that argument when it was made, however, the Government cannot rely on it now. Soon after the Government responded to the show-cause order in this case, the Bautista court entered a final judgment. According to that judgment, “the DHS policy is unlawful”—because, among other things, the judge interpreted it to “violat[e] Petitioners’ … statutory and constitutional rights.” Id. at *31, *28. Contrary to the Acting Director’s policy memo, the court declared that “§ 1226(a) is the appropriate governing authority over Petitioners’ detention,” id. at *10, meaning that members of the nationwide class (which would include the Petitioner in this case) could not be detained without a bond hearing. Given that
2 All parties agree that § 1226(c) requires detention of several categories of aliens who have committed specified criminal offenses. 3 Section 1225(b)(1) provides that, in general, aliens who were neither admitted nor paroled and have been in the country for less than two years are subject to expedited removal. 4 Sections 1231 commands the Attorney General to detain an alien after a removal order, § 1231(a)(2)(A), and either “remove the alien from the United States within a period of 90 days,” §1231(a)(1)(A), or evaluate the alien for release under a supervision order, §§ 1231(a)(3), (a)(6). 5 Named defendants in the California class-action litigation include the Department of Homeland Security, the Executive Office for Immigration Review, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the Acting Director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the Secretary of Homeland Security, and the Attorney General. interpretation of the immigration statutes, moreover, the court purported to vacate the new DHS policy. Id. at *31–32. In a reply brief, Evaristo now asks this Court to, in effect, enforce the California class judgment against the federal Respondents by preventing them from relying on their contrary interpretation of §§ 1225 and 1226 to justify pre-removal detention without bond. The Government’s principal and arguably sole reason for detaining Evaristo, he emphasizes, is its since-rejected interpretation of § 1225 to mandate detention. And now the Government is bound by a valid judgment, benefiting all class members, that precludes it from relying on that reason. In other cases, the federal Respondents have maintained that although the Bautista decision now is final, it nevertheless lacks preclusive effect in Kentucky habeas cases. Their briefs have offered a host of arguments, marching under two main banners. First, the Government has attacked the legality of a single court’s declaratory judgment that would bind the entirety of the nation’s immigration apparatus, freeze the development of the law, and perhaps effectively deliver habeas relief to a nationwide class of immigrants despite Supreme Court caselaw limiting such suits to the jurisdiction of confinement. See generally Rumsfeld v. Padilla, 542 U.S. 426 (2004). Second, the Government has questioned the preclusive effect of the Bautista judgment outside the Central District of California. Yet the Government hasn’t yet offered a reason for this Court—as opposed to an appellate court—to relieve the Government of the binding nature of a final judgment. Longstanding federal law concerning the preclusive effect of judgments—rightly or wrongly—sharply limits one judge’s authority to question the force or accuracy of another judge’s judgment. “A final judgment on the merits of an action precludes the parties or their privies from relitigating issues that were or could have been raised in that action.” Federated Dep’t Stores v. Moitie, 452 U.S. 394, 398 (1981). These attacks may well be correct. The Bautista court itself acknowledged that affording “habeas relief on a nationwide level” might offend Padilla’s district-of- confinement rule. Bautista, 2025 WL 3713987, at *14. And several statutory provisions limit trial judges’ equitable authority to interfere with immigration and removal proceedings under the guise of habeas. See, e.g., id. at *27 (discussing 8 U.S.C. §§ 1252(e)(1)(A)
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY PADUCAH DIVISION
JOSE JUAN CORONEL EVARISTO PETITIONER
v. No. 5:25-cv-215-BJB
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY, RESPONDENTS ET AL.
* * * * * OPINION & ORDER Jose Evaristo, a Mexican citizen, entered the United States without permission more than twenty years ago. Petition (DN 1) ¶ 12. And he has lived here since, under a prior Department of Homeland Security policy allowing—but not requiring—the detention of people who entered illegally and reside inside the country. He concedes, however, that he lacks lawful status in the United States. Recently, the Acting Director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement changed the agency’s policy: ICE now considers the Petitioner, and others like him, subject to mandatory detention under 8 U.S.C. § 1225(b)(2) rather than permissive detention under § 1226(a). See USA Response (DN 10) at 7–15.1 Under the new policy, immigration officers arrested the Petitioner. See Petition ¶ 5. And he has spent the past few months in Christian County Jail while his removal proceedings play out. Like many other immigration detainees who have sought habeas in recent months, the Petitioner argues that no statute authorizes—and the Constitution forbids—the Government to detain him without bond. Unlike some other detainees, however, this Petitioner adds something more: In a response to this Court’s show- cause order, he contends that because another judge has already decided it’s unlawful to detain someone in his shoes without bond, his continued detention is unlawful and
1 See also Maria Sacchetti & Carol D. Leonnig, ICE Declares Millions of Undocumented Immigrations Ineligible for Bond Hearings, WASH. POST (July 15, 2025); ICE Memo: Interim Guidance Regarding Detention Authority for Applications for Admission, AM. IMMIGR. LAWYERS’ ASS’N, Doc. No. 25071607 (July 8, 2025), https://www.aila.org/library/ice-memo- interim-guidance-regarding-detention-authority-for-applications-for-admission (supplying an apparently genuine copy of the policy memo in question, which doesn’t appear to be available on ICE’s website or in the Federal Register). violates that court order. See Response (DN 16) at 5–6. The decision in question is Bautista v. Santacruz, --- F. Supp. 3d ---, No. 5:25-cv-1873, 2025 WL 3713987 (C.D. Cal. Dec. 18, 2025). It certified a nationwide class consisting of: All noncitizens in the United States without lawful status who (1) have entered or will enter the United States without inspection; (2) were not or will not be apprehended upon arrival; and (3) are not or will not be subject to detention under 8 U.S.C. § 1226(c)[2], § 1225(b)(1)[3], or § 1231[4] at the time the Department of Homeland Security makes an initial custody determination. Bautista, 2025 WL 3713987, at *32. The District Judge entered this declaratory judgment against numerous federal defendants—all agencies or the heads of agencies involved in immigration enforcement, including three of the Respondents in these cases: Todd Lyons (the Acting Director of ICE), Kristi Noem (the Secretary of Homeland Security), and Pamela Bondi (the Attorney General).5 Those defendants opposed class certification and the declaratory judgment in the California litigation. And as Respondents in this Kentucky litigation, they opposed habeas relief—at least insofar as it might flow from Bautista—because until December 18, the Central District had not yet entered judgment. See USA Response at 19–20. Whatever the merit of that argument when it was made, however, the Government cannot rely on it now. Soon after the Government responded to the show-cause order in this case, the Bautista court entered a final judgment. According to that judgment, “the DHS policy is unlawful”—because, among other things, the judge interpreted it to “violat[e] Petitioners’ … statutory and constitutional rights.” Id. at *31, *28. Contrary to the Acting Director’s policy memo, the court declared that “§ 1226(a) is the appropriate governing authority over Petitioners’ detention,” id. at *10, meaning that members of the nationwide class (which would include the Petitioner in this case) could not be detained without a bond hearing. Given that
2 All parties agree that § 1226(c) requires detention of several categories of aliens who have committed specified criminal offenses. 3 Section 1225(b)(1) provides that, in general, aliens who were neither admitted nor paroled and have been in the country for less than two years are subject to expedited removal. 4 Sections 1231 commands the Attorney General to detain an alien after a removal order, § 1231(a)(2)(A), and either “remove the alien from the United States within a period of 90 days,” §1231(a)(1)(A), or evaluate the alien for release under a supervision order, §§ 1231(a)(3), (a)(6). 5 Named defendants in the California class-action litigation include the Department of Homeland Security, the Executive Office for Immigration Review, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the Acting Director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the Secretary of Homeland Security, and the Attorney General. interpretation of the immigration statutes, moreover, the court purported to vacate the new DHS policy. Id. at *31–32. In a reply brief, Evaristo now asks this Court to, in effect, enforce the California class judgment against the federal Respondents by preventing them from relying on their contrary interpretation of §§ 1225 and 1226 to justify pre-removal detention without bond. The Government’s principal and arguably sole reason for detaining Evaristo, he emphasizes, is its since-rejected interpretation of § 1225 to mandate detention. And now the Government is bound by a valid judgment, benefiting all class members, that precludes it from relying on that reason. In other cases, the federal Respondents have maintained that although the Bautista decision now is final, it nevertheless lacks preclusive effect in Kentucky habeas cases. Their briefs have offered a host of arguments, marching under two main banners. First, the Government has attacked the legality of a single court’s declaratory judgment that would bind the entirety of the nation’s immigration apparatus, freeze the development of the law, and perhaps effectively deliver habeas relief to a nationwide class of immigrants despite Supreme Court caselaw limiting such suits to the jurisdiction of confinement. See generally Rumsfeld v. Padilla, 542 U.S. 426 (2004). Second, the Government has questioned the preclusive effect of the Bautista judgment outside the Central District of California. Yet the Government hasn’t yet offered a reason for this Court—as opposed to an appellate court—to relieve the Government of the binding nature of a final judgment. Longstanding federal law concerning the preclusive effect of judgments—rightly or wrongly—sharply limits one judge’s authority to question the force or accuracy of another judge’s judgment. “A final judgment on the merits of an action precludes the parties or their privies from relitigating issues that were or could have been raised in that action.” Federated Dep’t Stores v. Moitie, 452 U.S. 394, 398 (1981). These attacks may well be correct. The Bautista court itself acknowledged that affording “habeas relief on a nationwide level” might offend Padilla’s district-of- confinement rule. Bautista, 2025 WL 3713987, at *14. And several statutory provisions limit trial judges’ equitable authority to interfere with immigration and removal proceedings under the guise of habeas. See, e.g., id. at *27 (discussing 8 U.S.C. §§ 1252(e)(1)(A) and 1252(f)(1)); id. at *23 (discussing §§ 1252(e)(1)(B) and 1252(e)(3)(A)). Undoubtedly wary of these limitations, the Bautista court didn’t grant habeas relief (at least not per se habeas relief) or even enter any sort of injunction against the federal immigration officials, see § 1252(f)(1). Yet its declaratory judgment came as close as one could reasonably imagine to effectively ordering such relief, given the statutory limits Congress carefully enacted on courts’ remedial authorities. Cf. Khalil v. President of the United States, --- F.4th ---, 2026 WL 111933, at *9 (3d Cir. 2026) (describing the “channeling scheme” that Congress created to reduce “piecemeal litigation” in this area). A nationwide, non-habeas habeas class surely distorts Congress’ expectation that “[d]istrict courts are limited to granting habeas relief ‘within their respective jurisdictions.’” Padilla, 542 U.S. at 442 (quoting 28 U.S.C. § 2241(a)); see also id. at 443 (“[A]n ‘application for a writ of habeas corpus must be made to the appropriate district court.’”) (quoting FED. R. APP. P. 22(a)). But the Government’s jurisdictional attacks have overlooked an important aspect of the federal law of preclusion: “The principles of res judicata apply to questions of jurisdiction as well as to other issues.” Treinies v. Sunshine Mining Co., 308 U.S. 66, 78 (1939). A jurisdictionally defective judgment is susceptible to collateral attack if no one noticed the jurisdictional defect in the first forum. But, at least according to aged but binding rulings of the Supreme Court, if a jurisdictional question was itself “fully and fairly litigated by the parties and finally determined in” the rendering forum, then that question isn’t subject to collateral attack in a second forum. Durfee v. Duke, 375 U.S. 106, 116 (1963). The Government has urged that the nationwide class declaration should be treated as a “legal nullity.” Although the Government never quite says as much, it has strongly implied that the class certification—at least as extended and exploited here—contradicts the Supreme Court’s recent rejection of nationwide injunctions. See Trump v. CASA, Inc., 606 U.S. 831 (2025). But part of the reason the Supreme Court rejected universal injunctions was because they “are a class-action workaround.” Id. at 850. So the question before the Court—and the Government, should it seek to continue detaining the Petitioner—is neither the lawfulness nor the wisdom of the Bautista judgment. It is instead whether Bautista is indeed a judgment imbued with preclusive power—and what if any reasons beyond those the Central District considered and rejected justify the Petitioner’s detention as against habeas petitions asserted in the district of confinement. In this case, the Government asked the Court to dismiss or stay the petition based on the Bautista judgment. And it hasn’t offered any response to the Petitioner’s preclusion argument since that decision became final. Of course, if the Government has some other lawful reason for detention beyond the mandatory-detention argument from § 1225(b)(2), then it may offer it— and continue to detain the Petitioner if it can show lawful authority to do so. See Boumediene v. Bush, 553 U.S. 723, 740–41 (2008) (“[B]y issuing the writ of habeas corpus common-law courts … inquire into the authority of a jailer to hold a prisoner.”); 3 JOSEPH STORY, COMMENTARIES ON THE CONSTITUTION § 1333 (“[I]f no sufficient ground of detention appears, the party is entitled to his immediate discharge.”). But so far, given the Bautista judgment about the scope of § 1225(b)(2), and the return the Government has made in this case, release seems warranted. So if the Government has any other reason to confine the Petitioner, or additional reasons to doubt the preclusive effect of Bautista, it must offer it promptly. ORDER In response to the parties’ agreement to waive the hearing and submit this case for a decision based on the briefs, the Court modifies their proposed briefing schedule to give both parties an opportunity to respond to this opinion and order. The Government must file any supplemental response to this order no later than February 11, 2026. The Petitioner may file a response to the Government’s brief no later than February 18, 2026. If the Government does not offer other lawful reasons to detain the Petitioner, or a reason that Bautista does not preclude it from advancing the reasons it has relied on so far, the Court will order the Petitioner’s release for lack of a lawful reason to detain.
Benjamin Beaton, District Judge United States District Court February 4, 2026