Changeflow GovPing Courts & Legal Alhadje v. Guadian - Habeas Petition Denied
Priority review Enforcement Amended Final

Alhadje v. Guadian - Habeas Petition Denied

Favicon for www.courtlistener.com D. Colorado Opinions
Filed March 20th, 2026
Detected March 29th, 2026
Email

Summary

The U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado denied a habeas petition filed by Ali Alhadje, an immigration detainee. The court found that Alhadje's acknowledgment of refusing to board a removal flight rendered him ineligible for release from detention.

What changed

The U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado, in the case of Alhadje v. Guadian (Docket No. 1:25-cv-04153), has denied a habeas petition filed by Ali Alhadje, an immigration detainee represented pro se. The court's decision, dated March 20, 2026, hinges on the petitioner's concession that he refused to board a flight booked for his removal to Louisiana in January 2026. This refusal, coupled with his removability, was deemed by the court to be behavior that legally prohibits his release from detention.

This ruling has direct implications for immigration detainees challenging their confinement. By acknowledging a refusal to cooperate with removal proceedings, individuals may forfeit their eligibility for release through habeas corpus petitions. Compliance officers and legal counsel representing immigration detainees should advise clients that such actions can be determinative in court, potentially leading to the denial of release requests and continued detention. There are no specific compliance deadlines or penalties mentioned, as this is a judicial decision on an individual case, but it establishes a precedent for how such refusals are treated in immigration detention challenges.

What to do next

  1. Advise immigration detainees that refusal to board removal flights can lead to denial of habeas petitions.
  2. Review case law regarding detainee release eligibility in light of refusal to comply with removal orders.

Source document (simplified)

Jump To

Top Caption Trial Court Document The text of this document was obtained by analyzing a scanned document and may have typos.

Support FLP

CourtListener is a project of Free
Law Project
, a federally-recognized 501(c)(3) non-profit. Members help support our work and get special access to features.

Please become a member today.

Join Free.law Now

March 20, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note

Ali Alhadje v. Robert Guadian, Denver Field Office Director ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations

District Court, D. Colorado

Trial Court Document

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLORADO

Judge Charlotte N. Sweeney

Civil Action No. 1:25-cv-04153-CNS

ALI ALHADJE,

Petitioner,

v.

ROBERT GUADIAN, Denver Field Office Director ICE Enforcement and Removal

Operations,

Respondent.

                    ORDER                                        

       I.   SUMMARY FOR PRO SE PETITIONER                        

You seek immediate release from your detention. However, you acknowledge that
in January 2026 you refused to board a flight from Denver to Louisiana that was booked
for your removal. Because you acknowledge that you refused to board this flight and you
are removable, in the eyes of the law you have engaged in behavior that prohibits the
Court from granting your release from detention. Therefore, the Court must deny your
habeas petition.

II. DISCUSSION

Petitioner represents himself without an attorney. Petitioner challenges his
detention through a habeas petition. See, e.g., ECF No. 6 at 4. In their response brief,
Respondents represent that Petitioner “acted to prevent his removal by refusing to board
the January 20, 2026, flight to Louisiana for staging for removal,” ECF No. 17 at 8, and
provide evidentiary support for this proposition in connection with their supplemental brief.
See, e.g., ECF No. 19-1 at 2. Petitioner concedes that he refused to board this flight in
his own reply brief. See ECF No. 23 at 1; id. at 2 (“I refused to board.”). Because Petitioner
concedes that he refused to board this flight, the Court DENIES his habeas petition.

Fatal to Petitioner’s petition is his concession that he refused to board his flight to
Louisiana. The Tenth Circuit has concluded in a case where a petitioner “refused to
accept or acknowledge” required forms “to assist in [removal]” and “refused to complete
an application for a Nigerian passport,” Abiodun v. Mukasey, 264 F. App’x 726, 729 (10th

Cir. 2008), that petitioner’s detention “did not raise the specter of indefinite detention,” id. (emphasis added). See also Singh v. Barr, No. 17-CV-03057-DDD, 2019 WL 2452822,
at *4 (D. Colo. June 12, 2019) (“And, as in Abiodun but unlike Zadvydas, there is no
showing that India would not receive [the petitioner], and his continued detention is of his
own doing.” (citation modified)).

The facts here are similar. Fundamentally, Petitioner’s acknowledged refusal to
board the flight to Louisiana does not raise the specter of indefinite detention that might
otherwise give rise to a valid habeas claim. Cf. 8 U.S.C. § 1231 (a)(1)(C); Pelich v. I.N.S., 329 F.3d 1057, 1060 (9th Cir. 2003) (“The risk of indefinite detention that motivated the
Supreme Court’s statutory interpretation in Zadvydas does not exist when an alien is the

cause of his own detention.”); Lema v. I.N.S., 341 F.3d 853, 857 n.7 (9th Cir. 2003)
(“[R]emovable aliens should not be rewarded with release into the United States for their
bad behavior in refusing to assist officials to effect their removal.” (citation modified)); ECF
No. 6 at 6.
“To be sure, [Respondent's] protracted efforts to complete removal is no cause for
praise.” Rani v. Barr, No. 19-CV-02017-RBJ, 2019 WL 6682834, at *3 (D. Colo. Dec. 6,
2019). But based on the record before the Court, the Court cannot conclude that granting
Petitioner the habeas relief he seeks is proper. See, e.g., Lema, 341 F.3d at 853; ECF
No. 6 at 6.
Accordingly, and consistent with the above analysis, the Court DENIES Petitioner’s
Application for a Writ of Habeas Corpus Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2241. ECF No. 6. The
Clerk of Court is directed to close this case.
DATED this 20th day of March 2026.
BY TH YP URT:

MS
bd rlotte eewpeney
United Sta Bistrict Juage

Named provisions

SUMMARY FOR PRO SE PETITIONER DISCUSSION

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
D. Colorado
Filed
March 20th, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive
Docket
1:25-cv-04153

Who this affects

Applies to
Immigration detainees Legal professionals
Activity scope
Immigration Enforcement Detention Challenges
Geographic scope
Colorado US-CO

Taxonomy

Primary area
Immigration
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Judicial Administration Criminal Justice

Get Courts & Legal alerts

Weekly digest. AI-summarized, no noise.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.

Get alerts for this source

We'll email you when D. Colorado Opinions publishes new changes.

Optional. Personalizes your daily digest.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.