Can You Sue ICE for Injuries or Wrongful Detention?

Immigration enforcement has exploded into the national conversation. Between the Minneapolis shooting in January and the ongoing protests across the country, people are asking a question that used to feel academic: what happens when ICE harms someone? Can you actually do anything about it?
The short answer is yes, you can sue. The longer answer involves a maze of federal procedures, strict deadlines, and legal doctrines that make it genuinely difficult. Not impossible. But difficult.
Key Takeaways
- You cannot sue ICE directly. You sue “the United States” through the Federal Tort Claims Act, and you must file an administrative claim within two years of your injury before going to court.
- Suing individual ICE agents is nearly impossible now. The Supreme Court’s 2022 decision in Egbert v. Boule effectively closed the door on constitutional claims against federal officers in immigration cases.
- Private detention facilities are easier to sue. Companies like GEO Group and CoreCivic don’t have federal immunity. State tort law applies to them.
- U.S. citizens wrongfully detained have won settlements. Cases involving detained American citizens have settled for amounts ranging from $125,000 to $400,000, though these required overwhelming evidence and skilled legal representation.
What Is ICE and Why Does It Matter Legally?
ICE didn’t exist before 2003. The agency was created after 9/11 when Congress reorganized federal law enforcement through the Homeland Security Act. They merged pieces of the old Customs Service and the Immigration and Naturalization Service into one agency under the new Department of Homeland Security.
Today, ICE has over 20,000 employees and an annual budget exceeding $8 billion. Two main divisions handle the work: Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) manages arrests and detention, while Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) handles criminal cases involving border crimes and human trafficking.
Why Being a Federal Agency Changes Everything
Here’s the thing that trips people up. When a city cop violates your rights, you can sue the officer personally under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. You can sue the city. You can often get punitive damages.
Federal agents operate under completely different rules.
Something called sovereign immunity protects the federal government from lawsuits unless Congress specifically says otherwise. The government literally cannot be sued without its own permission. Congress has waived this immunity in limited situations through the Federal Tort Claims Act, but even then, the FTCA comes with restrictions, exceptions, and procedural requirements that don’t apply to regular lawsuits.
How Do You Sue the Federal Government?
The Federal Tort Claims Act provides the primary path for monetary recovery when federal employees cause harm. But the process looks nothing like a normal lawsuit.
The Mandatory Administrative Claim
Before you can file any lawsuit in federal court, you must first file an administrative claim directly with the government agency. This is not optional. Courts will dismiss your case if you skip this step.
You file using Standard Form 95 (SF-95). For ICE claims, submit to the DHS Office of General Counsel or the ICE Office of the Principal Legal Advisor.
Your claim must include:
- Your name and contact information
- A written description of what happened
- A “sum certain” (the exact dollar amount you’re demanding)
That last part is critical. The amount you specify generally caps what you can recover later in court. Calculate it carefully with all anticipated medical expenses, lost wages, and other damages factored in.
What You Can and Cannot Recover
The FTCA allows claims for negligence, medical malpractice, wrongful death, assault, battery, false arrest, and false imprisonment when committed by federal law enforcement officers.
What you can get:
- Compensatory damages for actual losses
- Medical bills, lost wages, pain and suffering
What you cannot get:
- Punitive damages (prohibited under FTCA)
- Claims based on “discretionary” policy decisions
You must sue “the United States” as the defendant. Not ICE. Not the individual officers. The United States of America.
Can You Sue Individual ICE Officers?
This used to be possible through something called a Bivens action, named after a 1971 Supreme Court case that allowed people to sue federal officers directly for constitutional violations.
The Supreme Court killed this option in the immigration context.
The 2022 case Egbert v. Boule said courts should decline to extend Bivens “if there is any rational reason to think that the answer is Congress.” The existence of DHS’s internal grievance process, which provides no money and doesn’t let complainants participate meaningfully, was enough to foreclose the claim.
Since Egbert, circuit courts have consistently rejected constitutional claims against ICE and Border Patrol agents. If an ICE agent injures you, your realistic option is the FTCA claim against the government. Suing the individual agent personally is theoretically possible, but practically dead.
One exception: Some states have started passing their own laws to fill this gap. Illinois enacted a “Bivens Act” in December 2025, creating a state law cause of action against federal officers who violate constitutional rights during immigration enforcement. California has similar protections.
Have People Actually Won Cases Against ICE?
Yes. But successful cases share common features: overwhelming evidence, clear constitutional violations, and usually years of litigation with experienced counsel.
Wrongful Detention of U.S. Citizens
ICE has repeatedly detained American citizens, sometimes for extended periods. A Northwestern University study found approximately 1% of detainees at studied facilities were later confirmed as citizens. Some notable settlements:
- Rennison Castillo (U.S. Army veteran, naturalized citizen): Detained 7.5 months. Settlement: $400,000 plus a formal DOJ apology.
- Mark Lyttle (natural-born citizen with cognitive disabilities): Wrongfully deported to Mexico, wandered homeless through Central America for 125 days. Settlement: $175,000.
- Carlos Rios: Detained 7 days despite having his U.S. passport at arrest. Settlement: $125,000.
These cases worked because citizenship was provable with documents, and the government’s error was obvious.
Medical Negligence in Detention
A 2024 report by Physicians for Human Rights and the ACLU found that 95% of deaths in ICE detention between 2017 and 2021 were preventable with adequate medical care. Common problems include delayed treatment, failure to provide prescribed medications, and staffing shortages so severe that one lawsuit alleged only 2 nurses for 1,500 detainees.
Medical negligence claims face a high bar. You must show that the medical need was sufficiently serious and that officials actually knew of and disregarded the risk. But families have obtained settlements, particularly against private contractors like GEO Group and CoreCivic, who don’t enjoy federal immunity.
Class Actions Have Been More Successful
- Roy v. County of Los Angeles: $14 million to over 18,500 people unlawfully detained on ICE holds. Individual payments ranged from $250 to $25,000.
- Ms. L v. ICE: Family separation settlement benefiting 4,500 to 5,000 families, including an eight-year ban on separations.
- Fraihat v. ICE: COVID-19 class action representing 55,000 detainees. Over 60,000 people were released during the period when court orders were in effect.
What Should You Actually Do If ICE Harmed You?
The two-year deadline makes speed essential. Courts have dismissed cases where people filed even one day late.
Preserve everything immediately: citizenship documents, detention records, medical records, photographs of injuries, witness contact information, and any paperwork ICE gave you. Write down exactly what happened while it’s fresh.
File the administrative claim: Get the SF-95 form. Include a sum certain that accounts for all your damages. File with both the DHS Office of General Counsel and the ICE Office of the Principal Legal Advisor. Send it certified mail with a return receipt.
Consider all potential defendants:
- The United States (via FTCA) for federal employee actions
- Private contractors (GEO Group, CoreCivic) under state tort law
- Local law enforcement who participated in joint operations under Section 1983
Get qualified legal help: FTCA cases are genuinely complex. Immigration civil rights organizations, the ACLU, and attorneys who specialize in federal tort claims can evaluate your situation.
The Bottom Line
Suing ICE is possible but hard. The Federal Tort Claims Act provides the main avenue for recovery, with strict deadlines and mandatory administrative exhaustion. Constitutional claims against individual officers are essentially dead after recent Supreme Court decisions. Private contractors offer an easier litigation path.
The people who’ve succeeded typically had clear evidence, documented violations, and skilled legal representation. If you’ve been harmed by ICE, the two-year deadline starts running immediately. Don’t wait to explore your options.
This article provides general information about legal options for individuals harmed by ICE. It is not legal advice. If you’ve been injured or wrongfully detained, consult with an attorney who handles federal tort claims to discuss your specific situation.
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