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Supreme Court to decide if migrants detained for months must receive bond hearings

The justices will weigh whether noncitizens convicted of certain crimes can be held for months or years without an individualized bond review.

  • On Monday, the Supreme Court declined to hear a free-speech challenge from a former Indiana high school student, E.D., who sued the Noblesville School District over blocked anti-abortion club flyers.
  • Administrators at Noblesville High School rejected the student's 2021 flyers featuring 'Defund Planned Parenthood' signs, citing a policy prohibiting political content to maintain neutrality on matters of public controversy.
  • The Seventh Circuit upheld the district's decision by applying the 1988 Hazelwood standard, which allows schools to exercise editorial control over student speech for legitimate pedagogical concerns.
  • Justice Samuel Alito dissented from the denial, arguing the Supreme Court should clarify the 'muddled lines' of Hazelwood and how it applies to speech perceived as government-endorsed.
  • The denial leaves in place a patchwork of constitutional protections, as lower courts continue struggling with inconsistent rulings regarding the breadth of student-speech rights in K-12 public schools.
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The U.S. Supreme Court agreed on Monday to review whether immigrants who have been detained for months by ICE without their immediate deportation are entitled to a hearing before a judge to assess whether they represent a danger or a risk of escape. The decision comes at a time when 78% of Hispanics say that administration policies have been harmful to their community, and could affect tens of thousands of people currently in federal custody.

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Reuters broke the news in New York, United States on Monday, June 15, 2026.
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