US Court Orders Return of Wrongfully Deported Indian Man in Landmark Ruling

A US federal court has ruled that immigration authorities unlawfully deported Indian national Francisco D'Costa hours after a judge issued an order prohibiting his removal. The court rejected the government's claim that the deportation was inadvertent, stating the violation required a remedy. It ordered authorities to facilitate D'Costa's return to the United States to pursue his legal case. The court cited Supreme Court precedent that return is the proper remedy when a noncitizen is removed in violation of a court order.

Key Points: US Court Orders Return of Wrongfully Deported Indian National

  • Deported after court stay order
  • Removal violated judicial authority
  • Court orders government-facilitated return
  • Raises serious due process concerns
3 min read

US court orders immigration authorities to facilitate return of wrongfully deported Indian

A US federal court orders immigration authorities to facilitate the return of an Indian national deported in violation of a judicial stay, citing unlawful removal.

"The intent behind Petitioner's unlawful removal... has no bearing on the lawfulness of the removal. - US District Court"

Washington, Jan 13

A US federal court, in a one of its kind verdicts, has ordered immigration authorities to facilitate the return of an Indian national who was deported to India despite a court order explicitly barring his removal. The judge ruled that the deportation was unlawful and a violation of judicial authority.

In a memorandum and order issued on January 9, the US District Court for the Southern District of Texas said Francisco D'Costa was removed from the United States on December 20, 2025, "more than three hours after the Court order prohibiting the Government from removing him" had been issued.

The court noted that it had assumed jurisdiction over D'Costa's habeas petition earlier that morning and ordered that the government "SHALL NOT remove or deport Petitioner from the United States" without first obtaining permission from the court.

Despite that order, the court said, D'Costa was placed on a Turkish Airlines flight that departed Houston at 2:55 p.m. the same day. According to a memorandum submitted by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the US Attorney's Office, ICE officials, and the detention facility had notice of the stay before the flight departed.

"The intent behind Petitioner's unlawful removal-while relevant to contempt-has no bearing on the lawfulness of the removal," the court said, rejecting the government's argument that the deportation was inadvertent.

D'Costa, a native of India who has lived in the United States since 2009, was granted voluntary departure by an immigration judge in October 2025. After retaining counsel, he filed a motion to reopen his case, citing changed country conditions in India and a risk of persecution due to his conversion to Christianity, the court record shows.

The filing of that motion automatically converted his voluntary departure into a final removal order under federal regulations. The immigration judge denied a stay request but had not ruled on the motion to reopen at the time of D'Costa's removal, the court said.

In its order, the court said removal at that stage risked depriving D'Costa of his statutory right to pursue a motion to reopen, raising serious due process concerns.

However, the government argued that facilitating D'Costa's return was unnecessary. The court lacked jurisdiction; it asserted that D'Costa could pursue further proceedings abroad. The court rejected those arguments, stating that return was required to ensure the case is handled "as it would have been had he not been improperly removed".

Citing a unanimous Supreme Court ruling, the court said facilitating return to the United States is a proper remedy when a noncitizen is unlawfully removed in violation of a court order.

The court ordered the government to facilitate D'Costa's return "as soon as possible" and directed authorities to file, within five days, a plan outlining the steps they will take to do so.

At this stage, the court denied D'Costa's request for contempt findings and monetary sanctions without prejudice, allowing those issues to be raised later if necessary, the order said.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
While the court's order for his return is correct, it highlights a serious problem. The system is so backlogged and chaotic that people fall through the cracks. He lived there since 2009, filed all the right motions, and still this happened. The US needs to fix its immigration process.
D
David E
As someone who has worked with immigrants, this is unfortunately not an isolated incident. The "inadvertent" excuse is used too often. The court was right to reject it. The rule of law must apply to everyone, including immigration officials. A strong message needed to be sent.
A
Ananya R
The part about risk of persecution due to conversion is concerning. India is a secular democracy with freedom of religion. While I'm glad the court is protecting his rights, I hope the case doesn't create a wrong impression about conditions here. We have our challenges, but persecution is not state policy.
S
Siddharth J
Good verdict! The authorities knew about the court order and still put him on that flight to Turkey. That's blatant disregard. Now they have to spend taxpayer money to bring him back. Complete waste and unnecessary trauma for the individual. Hope he gets justice.
K
Kavya N
This is a complex case. He was granted voluntary departure but then filed to reopen. The system is confusing. But the bottom line is simple: a court said stop, and they didn't listen. The judge is right to order his return to fix this mess. Due process matters.

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