Blanche v. Lau
Decision
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Opinion of the Court
The Facts
Muk Choi Lau, a lawful permanent resident from China admitted in 2007, was charged with third-degree trademark counterfeiting in New Jersey in 2012. On returning from a trip abroad, DHS paroled him into the country pending resolution of the charges rather than admitting him, treating him as an applicant for admission subject to inadmissibility grounds. Lau challenged the government's authority to parole and seek removal of an LPR returning from a brief trip on these grounds.
The Issue
Whether a lawful permanent resident returning from a brief trip abroad is 'seeking admission' and thus subject to 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a) grounds of inadmissibility; and what evidence standard applies when the government seeks to parole or remove an LPR upon reentry.
The Rules
Aliens shall be inadmissible if they have committed crimes of moral turpitude; applies to those 'seeking admission.'
A returning LPR is not seeking admission unless, inter alia, they have been absent for more than 180 days, engaged in illegal activity, or departed under proceedings.
The Attorney General may parole into the United States temporarily under such conditions as he may prescribe only on a case-by-case basis for urgent humanitarian reasons or significant public benefit.
The Application
The government argues that under IIRIRA, a lawful permanent resident returning from abroad is 'seeking admission' and therefore subject to inadmissibility grounds under 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a). DHS can deny readmission based on criminal conduct, using the evidence standards applicable to inadmissibility determinations rather than criminal conviction requirements.
Lau argues a lawful permanent resident returning from a brief, innocent trip should not be treated as 'seeking admission' subject to criminal inadmissibility grounds without a conviction. Treating brief departures as new admissions exposes millions of LPRs to removal without the procedural protections that attend deportation proceedings for residents.
Argued April 22, 2026. The case asks whether routine travel by green card holders can trigger inadmissibility review — a question affecting millions of lawful permanent residents who travel internationally. The ruling will define the boundary between the government's admission power and the settled expectations of LPRs returning from brief trips.
The Conclusion
The Court held 6-3 that the Immigration and Nationality Act does not require border officers to have clear and convincing evidence before making certain removal or inadmissibility determinations. The decision reduces the evidentiary burden on the government in immigration enforcement proceedings at the border.
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