As of July 2025
For decades, Americans were taught that the Constitution guaranteed everyone the right to fair treatment under the law. That no matter who you were—citizen, immigrant, refugee—you were entitled to due process before the government could take away your liberty or send you away.
Today, those protections are eroding faster than most people realize.

❗ What Is Due Process?
“Due process” means the government cannot deprive you of life, liberty, or property without fair procedures. This principle is enshrined in the 5th and 14th Amendments:
5th Amendment: No person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.
14th Amendment: Nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.
Notice: No person—not “no citizen.”
This has been confirmed by the U.S. Supreme Court in Yick Wo v. Hopkins (1886) and many cases since (Cornell Law).
🧭 What’s Changing in 2025
In recent years, policies and rulings have chipped away at these protections. Here are major examples:
1️⃣ Expedited Removal Nationwide
Under the Trump administration, DHS expanded “expedited removal,” letting the government deport people without a court hearing if they can’t quickly prove they’ve been in the U.S. over 2 years.
In June 2025, the D.C. Circuit upheld this expansion (Immigration Forum).
Critics warn this allows deportations without fair hearings, even for long-time residents who can’t immediately produce paperwork.
2️⃣ Deportations to Third Countries
On July 3, 2025, the Supreme Court ruled the administration can resume deporting migrants to third countries without traditional hearings—raising due process and human rights concerns (Reuters).
3️⃣ Alien Enemies Act
In March 2025, the government used the 1798 Alien Enemies Act to deport over 130 Venezuelans to El Salvador within 24 hours (Time).
Many were detained without lawyers or full hearings.
4️⃣ Wrongful Deportations of Citizens
In April 2025, the Supreme Court ordered the return of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a U.S. citizen wrongly deported under expedited removal (Politico).
Investigations have documented hundreds of wrongful deportations of U.S. citizens over the past decade.
🚨 Why This Should Worry Everyone
When due process is weakened for some, it eventually affects everyone:
✅ Anyone stopped on the street could be forced to prove status immediately.
✅ Database errors and mistaken identities can lead to detention or deportation.
✅ Courts increasingly defer to the executive branch.
This is not hypothetical—it is happening right now.
🛡️ What Does the Constitution Actually Say?
Some claim immigrants “have no rights.” That is incorrect:
- Yick Wo v. Hopkins (1886): The 14th Amendment protects all persons regardless of nationality (Cornell Law).
- Zadvydas v. Davis (2001): Noncitizens cannot be held indefinitely without due process (Oyez).
- Plyler v. Doe (1982): Even undocumented children have a right to public education (Oyez).
🏛️ What Can Be Done?
If you care about freedom, whether conservative or progressive, remember:
When the government can lock people up or deport them without due process, no one is safe.
What you can do:
- Support legal defense funds and immigrant rights groups.
- Demand Congress restore procedural protections.
- Watch and share credible reporting on these practices.
- Leave your stories here for documentation. I am trying to document and keep databases so our history isn’t lost. Jump into the comments.
🌿 Final Thought
Due process is not a perk or a privilege. It is the foundation of any free society.
When that foundation cracks, it doesn’t stop at the border.
It comes for all of us.
