HR-9099-119
Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary, and in addition to the Committee on Homeland Security, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.
Sponsored by Timothy Kennedy (D-NY)
What it does
This bill would require U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to offer each person taken into custody the option to designate a point of contact — such as a family member or attorney — to be notified before that person is released. DHS would be required to make at least two notification attempts before release. The bill also requires translation and interpretation services for both the detainee and the designated contact, and explicitly prohibits using any information collected under the bill for immigration enforcement purposes.
Who benefits
Detained immigrants and their families, who would receive advance notice before a detainee is released rather than learning of a release after the fact or not at all. Immigration attorneys and legal aid organizations, who could use the notification to coordinate representation or post-release support. Advocacy and social services organizations that assist recently released detainees with housing, transportation, and reintegration. Non-English-speaking detainees and their contacts, who would receive interpretation services at no cost. Children and other dependents of detainees who may need to arrange care or reunification.
Who is hurt
DHS, CBP, and ICE, which would bear new administrative and operational costs to build and maintain the notification system and provide translation services at scale. Taxpayers, who would fund those implementation costs. Immigration enforcement operations could face indirect complications if the notification process creates logistical delays. Detainees who do not designate a contact would receive no benefit, potentially creating an uneven experience within the detained population.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that families of detainees are frequently left without any information about when or where a loved one will be released, creating dangerous situations — particularly for vulnerable individuals released in unfamiliar locations without support. They contend the bill imposes a minimal procedural burden on DHS while addressing a concrete humanitarian gap, and that the explicit prohibition on using collected information for enforcement purposes protects detainees from any chilling effect on participation.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that adding mandatory notification requirements and multilingual interpretation services to every CBP and ICE detention intake creates a significant administrative and fiscal burden on agencies already managing high detention volumes. They contend that the enforcement-use prohibition could limit DHS's operational flexibility, and that the bill may create litigation exposure if notifications are delayed or missed — effectively converting a procedural requirement into a new avenue for legal challenges against enforcement actions.