For Immediate Release
Press Contacts:
Linda Paris, Washington Lawyers’ Committee, (202) 308-5186, [email protected]
Jossie Flor Sapunar, CASA, 240-706-2624, [email protected]
Yatziri Tovar, Make the Road NY, 917-771-2818, [email protected]
On February 5, 2025, the Secretary of Homeland Security issued an order to end the critical immigrant relief program Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Venezuelans living in the U.S. This unconstitutional action forces nearly 600,000 Venezuelans and their families currently living in the U.S. with TPS protection into the untenable position of potentially being forced to return to a country experiencing what has been described as one of the worst humanitarian crises in the history of the Western Hemisphere. Secretary Noem’s action would also strip Venezuelan TPS holders of their ability to work lawfully in the United States.
The Equal Protection Clause of the Fifth Amendment prohibits the federal government from taking action for which discriminatory intent or purpose is a motivating factor. The discriminatory intent is evidenced by federal officials’ repeated remarks that Venezuela and other non-European countries have “emptied their jails” and “mental institutions” to send migrants to the U.S. In violation of the Fifth Amendment’s Due Process protections, the complaint alleges that federal officials abused their authority.
The termination comes within days of federal officials calling Venezuelans “dirtbags” on Fox News and was preceded by repeated statements that dehumanize immigrants of color. The complaint asserts that the demonstrated racial animus motivating the termination of Venezuela TPS violates the Fifth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.
The Secretary of Homeland Secretary and the federal government also failed to follow the Administrative Procedure Act. The Administrative Procedure Act authorizes federal courts to set aside unlawful agency actions.
CASA and Make the Road New York on behalf of their members nationwide seek to revoke the unlawful termination of the TPS designation for Venezuela.
E.B. is a single mother, an insurance agent, and a CASA member in Georgia. “I am suing the Trump administration for its cruel decision to end Temporary Protected Status for my home country, Venezuela. This decision threatens not just me, but also my son, my elderly parents, and the life we have fought so hard to build. My son, who has Williams syndrome and intellectual disabilities, depends on me entirely. In the U.S., he has access to medical care, education, and opportunities that were impossible in Venezuela. Without TPS, I would lose my ability to work legally, putting my entire family at risk. I refuse to stay silent while our future is under attack. This lawsuit is not just about me: it’s about every TPS holder who has built a life here, every parent fighting for their child’s future, and every family thrown into crisis overnight. We need the courts to intervene before it’s too late.”
Read the complaint here.