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Supreme Court of the United States Orders Immediate Withdrawal of ICE Agents From Airport Security Operations After Donald Trump Deploy ICE to Aid TSA Staffs Amid Ongoing DHS Funding Crisis
Supreme Court Orders Immediate Removal of ICE From Airports in Emergency Ruling
The SCOTUS has issued a sweeping emergency order directing the administration of Donald Trump to immediately withdraw ICE personnel from airports nationwide, dealing a major legal setback to the White House amid an escalating security and funding crisis.

The late-breaking decision comes after the administration deployed ICE agents to assist the TSA in airport operations, citing severe staffing shortages linked to an ongoing funding shortfall within the DHS. The move, described by officials as a temporary emergency measure, quickly sparked legal challenges and fierce political backlash.
In its ruling, the court determined that the use of ICE agents in frontline airport security roles raised serious constitutional and statutory concerns. While the justices did not fully rule on the broader legality of the policy, they concluded that immediate intervention was necessary to prevent potential violations of federal law and to preserve the status quo until lower courts fully review the case.
Legal experts say the decision underscores the limits of executive authority in reassigning federal agencies to roles outside their primary mandates. ICE, primarily tasked with immigration enforcement and border-related operations, had no clear statutory authorization to assume responsibilities typically handled by TSA officers, including passenger screening and checkpoint management.
The Trump administration had defended the deployment as a necessary response to what it called a “critical national security gap,” arguing that airport safety could be compromised without rapid reinforcement. Officials insisted that ICE personnel were qualified federal officers capable of maintaining order and assisting with security operations during the crisis.
However, critics—including civil liberties groups and several state attorneys general—argued that the move blurred the line between immigration enforcement and civilian travel, potentially leading to profiling concerns and unlawful detentions within airport environments.
The Supreme Court’s emergency order now forces the administration to reverse course immediately, requiring ICE agents to stand down from airport duties while TSA regains full operational control. The ruling also places additional pressure on lawmakers to resolve the DHS funding impasse that triggered the staffing shortages in the first place.
In a brief response, the White House expressed “strong disagreement” with the court’s intervention but confirmed it would comply with the order. Meanwhile, advocacy groups praised the decision as a necessary check on executive overreach.
The case is expected to continue in lower courts, setting up a potentially landmark legal battle over the scope of presidential power in times of domestic security emergencies.
