Overview
- The agreement, filed in court, would keep Judge Robert Gettleman’s temporary restraining order in place until April 19, 2026, pending formal entry by the court.
- Gettleman’s October order followed findings that Broadview’s conditions were unconstitutionally harsh for civil detainees.
- The TRO mandates bedding and space to sleep, regular showers, three meals with bottled water, hygiene and menstrual products, prescribed medications, twice‑daily cell cleaning, private attorney calls, pro bono lists in English and Spanish, interpreter services, and timely entries in ICE’s detainee locator.
- Plaintiffs oppose skipping a preliminary injunction hearing, saying needed discovery has lagged and pointing to alleged post‑order violations, including counsel access initially denied until a December 3 directive by a magistrate.
- Government attorneys contend a separate injunction hearing would be duplicative and say the case is effectively moot because redeployments cut Broadview’s processing to very low numbers, sometimes zero.