The Supreme Court is set to hear arguments on April 29 in one of the most consequential immigration cases of the current term, a challenge to the Trump administration’s effort to end Temporary Protected Status for Haitians and Syrians. But ahead of that hearing, attorneys representing TPS holders have submitted a letter to the justices alerting them to newly produced government documents that they argue directly contradict the administration’s stated reasons for terminating the program.
The documents, obtained through the discovery process, raise pointed questions about whether the government’s public rationale for ending TPS protections was supported by its own internal research. If the justices find the material persuasive, it could significantly complicate the administration’s position before the court.
What the documents reveal
Three documents sit at the center of the filing. The first is an internal email from September 2025, written by a researcher at U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. In it, the researcher described being directed by a supervisor to include a section in a Haiti report arguing that TPS acts as a pull factor for unlawful migration. The researcher noted that she would only include such a claim if there was empirical evidence to support it, and acknowledged there was none. She made clear she was complying under instruction but wanted her objection on record.
A second email from the same researcher, sent the following month, addressed terrorism-related claims in the same analysis. It noted that there were no known or suspected terrorist records associated with the Haiti TPS population and that the relevant claim had been removed from the report because it did not support the termination argument.
The third document came from a different agency employee and cited government data showing that a fraction of one percent of Haiti TPS holders had any public safety records, with none linked to terrorism.
Taken together, the documents suggest that internal findings were shaped to fit a predetermined conclusion rather than allowed to inform it, a characterization the administration has not publicly addressed.
Haiti and the courts
The administration’s effort to end TPS protections has met consistent resistance in the lower courts. A federal district judge in Washington found that the decision-making process behind the termination failed to faithfully apply the law to the facts, noting that public statements made by the president and other officials about Haitian immigrants reflected a pattern of derogatory characterizations about nonwhite foreigners that appeared to color the policy process.
A divided federal appeals court panel declined to lift the district court order blocking the termination. The majority found that Haitian TPS holders faced serious and well-documented harm if the protections were removed, including the risk of detention, deportation, family separation, and loss of work authorization. A dissenting judge sided with the administration, arguing that courts were improperly inserting themselves into matters of executive immigration policy.
What comes next
The Supreme Court agreed last month to take up the issue jointly in the Haiti and Syria cases, while keeping the lower court protections in place in the interim. A ruling is expected before the end of the term in late spring or early summer.
The outcome will carry consequences well beyond Haiti and Syria. TPS protections currently cover immigrants from several countries, and whatever standard the court establishes for reviewing termination decisions will shape how future administrations exercise that authority. For the hundreds of thousands of people whose legal status hangs in the balance, April 29 is a date that carries enormous weight.

