Exterior steps of an Illinois courthouse on a sunny day for an article about courthouse immigration arrests

Illinois bans courthouse immigration arrests so survivors can seek justice

Illinois has enacted a statewide ban on civil immigration arrests at and around state courthouses, clearing the path to justice for domestic violence survivors, crime witnesses, and anyone else who needs to walk into a courtroom without fearing deportation. The legislation — formally called the Courts Are Not Traps Act — passed with support from more than 80 organizations and extends protections that Cook County courts had recently secured by court order to every resident of the state.

At a glance

  • Courthouse immigration arrests: HB1312 prohibits Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents from making civil immigration arrests in or around Illinois state courthouses, ensuring all residents can attend hearings without the threat of detention.
  • Domestic violence protection: Survivors who previously avoided seeking protective orders — fearing that showing up to court would expose them to federal agents — can now appear with legal protection against civil arrest.
  • Enforcement mechanism: The law enables civil penalties for violations and gives individuals the right to sue for damages, making its guarantees enforceable rather than symbolic.

Why the courthouse was the problem

For years, civil immigration enforcement near courts created a specific and well-documented vulnerability. Abusers in domestic violence cases learned they could threaten to report their partners to immigration authorities if victims sought protective orders or showed up for scheduled hearings. The courthouse itself became a tool of control.

That dynamic was not hypothetical. Research from the Brennan Center for Justice documented sharp drops in courthouse attendance among immigrant communities during periods of heightened ICE activity near courts. Victims stopped coming. Cases collapsed. Offenders walked free.

“Domestic violence survivors do not need additional barriers that prevent them from accessing legal remedies, like getting an order of protection in civil court,” said Amanda Pyron, President and CEO of The Network: Advocating Against Domestic Violence. “HB1312 will ensure survivors can come forward to seek justice and safety.”

What happens when witnesses stay home

The courthouse immigration arrests problem extends well beyond domestic violence. Criminal prosecutions depend on witnesses. When witnesses fear arrest, prosecutors lose testimony, juries hear incomplete evidence, and defendants who should face accountability sometimes do not.

Communities where residents distrust government institutions tend to report fewer crimes and cooperate less with investigations — a pattern that costs everyone, not just immigrants. Illinois is now telling witnesses: your testimony will not cost you your residency.

The bill’s passage came after at least 14 Illinois residents were arrested on civil warrants after showing up to court as required or to support a family member. In one documented case, the person detained was simply accompanying someone who had a traffic ticket. Federal agents — often masked, armed, and wearing tactical gear — also harassed courthouse employees, questioned staff about their coworkers’ ethnicity, and exposed workers to chemical agents designed for riot control.

A century of precedent, now codified

Illinois law has recognized the need to protect people appearing at court from civil arrest for more than a century. The Courts Are Not Traps Act does not create new principle — it locks existing principle into statute and gives it teeth.

“Codifying this centuries-old protection in the law will make sure parties and witnesses can attend to their legal matters without fear,” said Daniel J. Schneider of Legal Action Chicago.

The ACLU of Illinois actively supported the legislation, arguing that courthouse enforcement undermines public safety for the whole community, not just individuals targeted by immigration enforcement. The National Immigrant Justice Center, which tracks similar efforts nationally, notes that California and Washington have enacted comparable protections — with Illinois now joining that list.

Stability with ripple effects

People who can resolve legal matters — traffic violations, landlord disputes, family court issues — without fearing arrest are more likely to keep their jobs, maintain housing, and stay connected to their families. That stability carries economic and social consequences for whole neighborhoods.

“Federal immigration enforcement has disrupted the ability of Latino and immigrant families to work, go to school, seek medical care, and access justice because of fear,” said Linda Xóchitl Tortolero, President and CEO of the Latino Policy Forum. “If anyone feels unsafe going to state court, our legal system cannot function — and that impacts all of us.”

One unresolved reality: the law governs state courthouse grounds, but federal immigration authority does not stop at state lines. Immigrant communities still face enforcement risks in many other contexts, and advocates are clear that courthouse protections are one piece of a much larger system. Cook County Public Defender Sharone R. Mitchell, Jr. framed what the law does accomplish plainly: “Our justice system cannot function if our courts become traps that are used to ensnare and terrorize our clients when they show up to court as they are required to do.”

Access to justice should not depend on immigration status. Courts exist to resolve disputes, protect survivors, and hold offenders accountable — and they can only do that when everyone who needs them can actually walk through the door. Illinois has made that possible. That is not a small thing.

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For more on this story, see: Cook County Public Defender

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