Roberts, Gorsuch join liberal justices in Supreme Court immigration ruling
- The Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that immigrants who agree to leave the U.S. Voluntarily are entitled to deadline flexibility when the deadline falls on a weekend or holiday.
- Justice Neil Gorsuch stated that standard legal principles should apply, extending a Saturday deadline to the next business day.
- The four dissenting conservative justices argued that the Court should have left the matter to a lower court.
48 Articles
48 Articles

Court: Give immigrants period of days to leave
WASHINGTON — A divided Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that immigrants who agree to leave the country are allowed some deadline flexibility in a case that was argued before President Donald Trump's immigration crackdown.
Supreme Court sides with illegal immigrant in deadline case, Gorsuch and Roberts join liberal justices
CV NEWS FEED // In a rare 5-4 split Tuesday, the Supreme Court ruled that illegal immigrants granted voluntary departure must be given extra time to… The post Supreme Court sides with illegal immigrant in deadline case, Gorsuch and Roberts join liberal justices appeared first on CatholicVote org.
BREAKING: Gorsuch and Roberts Side with Liberal Justices — Illegal Alien Can Ignore Deportation Deadline If It Falls on a Weekend or Holiday | The Gateway Pundit | by Jim Hᴏft
In a landmark Supreme Court ruling, Gorsuch and Roberts align with liberal justices, allowing deportation deadlines to be ignored if they fall on weekends, raising significant concerns about immigration law enforcement's future.
Roberts and Gorsuch Join The Left in Supreme Court Ruling on Immigration
A surprising Supreme Court ruling saw Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Neil Gorsuch side with the Court’s liberal wing, siding with an immigrant challenging a strict interpretation of a deportation deadline. The narrow 5-4 decision reveals fractures in the Court just ahead of major immigration cases. Key Facts: Supreme Court Ruling on Immigration Deadline The case, Monsalvo Velazquez v. Bondi, concerned a 60-day “voluntary departure” dead…
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