The Supreme Court unanimously ruled on March 4, 2026, that federal appeals courts must use a deferential substantial-evidence standard when reviewing Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) decisions on whether asylum seekers faced persecution under U.S. law.
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson wrote the opinion in Urias-Orellana v. Bondi. This decision resolves a split among appeals courts and strengthens deference to immigration agencies. It makes it harder for asylum applicants to overturn denials on appeal.
Background of the Case
A Salvadoran family—Douglas Humberto Urias-Orellana, his wife Sayra Iliana Gamez-Mejia, and their minor child—entered the U.S. without authorization in 2021. They fled threats from a hitman (sicario) in El Salvador. The hitman had shot two of Urias-Orellana’s half-brothers. Associates demanded money and assaulted him once.
The family applied for asylum. An immigration judge found the testimony credible but ruled the harm did not meet the persecution threshold. The judge noted the family had relocated safely within El Salvador before. The BIA upheld this in 2023, leading to a removal order.
The family petitioned the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit. That court affirmed using substantial-evidence review. The Supreme Court took the case to settle differing standards across circuits.
What the Supreme Court Decided
The Court held that the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) requires the substantial-evidence standard for BIA determinations on persecution. This applies even when facts are undisputed.
Reversal happens only if “any reasonable adjudicator would be compelled to conclude to the contrary” after reviewing the full record. Justice Jackson explained this in the opinion.
- The INA does not say “substantial evidence” directly.
- However, Section 1252(b)(4)(B) states administrative fact findings are “conclusive unless any reasonable adjudicator would be compelled to conclude to the contrary.”
- Past Supreme Court rulings treat this as a deferential substantial-evidence standard.
Jackson reinforced the 1992 case INS v. Elias-Zacarias. There, the Court said applicants must show evidence so compelling that “no reasonable factfinder could fail to find the requisite fear of persecution.”
Congress later amended the INA but codified this standard instead of changing it. The ruling affirms the First Circuit and sides with the government.
Why This Ruling Matters for Asylum Seekers
This decision limits federal courts’ ability to second-guess BIA conclusions on persecution. Asylum requires proving past persecution or a well-founded fear based on race, religion, nationality, social group, or political opinion.
- Courts now defer more to agencies.
- Overturning denials becomes tougher unless evidence overwhelmingly compels a different result.
- It streamlines reviews and reduces “activist” reversals in sympathetic cases, per some analysts.
Immigration experts note this upholds executive branch authority in asylum processing. It affects thousands of cases yearly, especially from high-threat countries like El Salvador.
For the full opinion, read it on the Supreme Court website. SCOTUSblog offers clear coverage here.
In short, the ruling promotes consistency but raises the bar for successful appeals. Have you followed other recent immigration cases? This one fits a pattern of stronger agency deference.
