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Clinton-Appointed Federal Judge Dies Suddenly Days After Ordering Convicted Plane Hijacker Released From ICE Custody
The timing is startling.
But the facts still have to be kept in a straight line.
Senior U.S. District Judge John E. Steele has died at age 77, according to a new report, just eight days after he ordered federal immigration officials to release a convicted Cuban plane hijacker from ICE custody.
No cause of death has been publicly announced. There is also no evidence at this point connecting Steele’s death to the ruling that had suddenly placed his name in national headlines.
Two extraordinary facts can sit next to each other without one proving the other.
Judge who freed Cuban plane hijacker dies suddenly days after controversial ruling https://t.co/kD03xuAx2t pic.twitter.com/uPfg0MQQCQ
— New York Post (@nypost) July 16, 2026
The New York Post reported that Steele’s death was confirmed by a Miami legal source and by a law clerk for Chief U.S. District Judge Marcia Morales Howard.
The circumstances of his death were not disclosed.
The report identified Steele as the senior Middle District of Florida judge who had just handled Morales’ habeas petition. It also recounted the hijacking conviction and the release order that triggered a fierce response from DHS and Congress.
The report appeared eight days after Steele signed the Morales release order and one day after an impeachment resolution was introduced against him in Congress. It noted that remarkable timing, but it did not allege that the events were connected.
The Post cited no medical finding, law-enforcement allegation or official statement suggesting foul play. It also did not identify a cause or place of death.
That missing information matters. Until Steele’s family or the federal court releases more, anyone claiming to know what happened is moving beyond the known facts.
What is known is that Steele had just issued one of the most controversial orders of his career.
On July 8, he directed ICE to release Miakel Guerra Morales, a Cuban national convicted for his role in the 2003 hijacking of a commuter plane bound for Havana.
Plane hijacker awaiting deportation freed by Dem-appointed 'activist' judge https://t.co/Oy6fHZFC2d pic.twitter.com/Ysf9YMSc3Y
— New York Post (@nypost) July 14, 2026
The actual federal court order lays out a case more complicated than a judge simply deciding that a convicted hijacker deserved freedom.
Steele signed the 17-page decision on July 8 in Miakel Guerra Morales v. Field Office Director, case number 2:26-cv-133-JES-DNF. The court was deciding whether ICE could keep holding Morales after his prison sentence while actual removal from the country remained uncertain.
Morales and at least 11 others boarded a Cuban commuter aircraft on March 19, 2003, assaulted members of the crew and forced the pilot to fly to Key West. The order says the group used knives and other force during the takeover.
Morales was later sentenced to 264 months in federal prison for aircraft piracy and conspiracy to interfere with a flight crew. That conviction was never overturned and was not challenged in Steele’s immigration-detention ruling.
After serving roughly 21 years, Morales entered immigration custody. An immigration judge ordered him removed from the United States but deferred his removal to Cuba under the Convention Against Torture.
ICE released Morales under supervision in March 2023, then arrested him again on December 30, 2025, while attempting to arrange his removal to Mexico.
That is where the government’s case ran into a serious legal problem.
By the time Steele ruled, Morales had been back in immigration detention for more than six months. The judge wrote that the government had produced no evidence that Mexico had agreed to accept him, that Mexican travel documents had been requested or that removal to any other country was likely in the foreseeable future.
Under the Supreme Court’s 2001 decision in Zadvydas v. Davis, the government generally cannot hold a noncitizen under a final removal order indefinitely when there is no significant likelihood of actual removal in the reasonably foreseeable future.
Steele did not erase Morales’ conviction. He did not give him legal status. He ordered ICE to release him within 24 hours under the same supervision framework that had applied before the December arrest.
The order also made clear that Morales could face penalties for violating those conditions and could be detained again if his removal later became reasonably foreseeable.
That explains the legal basis for Steele’s decision.
It does not make the result any less alarming to Americans who watched a man convicted of taking over a plane at knifepoint walk back out of federal custody.
In a July 14 official statement, the Department of Homeland Security blasted the ruling and said the release put the public at risk.
DHS stressed the violence of the original crime, Morales’ aircraft-piracy conviction and the 264-month prison sentence. The department also argued that federal judges should not prevent the administration from detaining what it described as dangerous criminal illegal aliens while removal efforts continue.
The agency said ICE had taken Morales back into custody in December 2025 after previously releasing him under supervision. Acting Assistant Secretary Lauren Bis framed Steele’s order as judicial overreach and argued that the administration was trying to protect American communities while pursuing deportation.
The dispute was real: Steele concluded the Constitution and controlling Supreme Court precedent barred continued detention on the record before him. DHS believed the result placed a convicted hijacker back into an American community while officials were still trying to deport him.
The backlash reached Congress almost immediately.
On July 15, Florida Republican Rep. Greg Steube introduced articles of impeachment against Steele.
A Cuban national convicted of hijacking a plane at knifepoint in 2003 should never have been released back into our communities. @DHSgov is right to call this out for what it is: activist judicial overreach.
I introduced articles of impeachment against Judge John E. Steele for…
— Congressman Greg Steube (@RepGregSteube) July 16, 2026
The official congressional record for H.Res. 1431 shows that Steube introduced the resolution on July 15 and that it was referred to the House Judiciary Committee.
The measure formally accused Steele of conduct warranting impeachment over the Morales release. It was an introduced resolution, not an impeachment vote by the full House, and the referral placed it at the beginning of the congressional process.
That sequence is important: the court order came July 8, DHS issued its public condemnation July 14, and Steube filed the impeachment resolution July 15. Steele’s death was reported the following day.
His death now ends any practical question of removing him from a judicial office he no longer holds. It does not settle the wider fight over the release order or answer whether the government could have built a stronger record for continued detention.
Steele’s official court biography says President Bill Clinton nominated him to the federal bench on June 6, 2000.
The Senate confirmed him on July 21, 2000, and he received his commission five days later. Steele took senior status in June 2015 after nearly 15 years as an active district judge.
Before becoming a district judge, Steele served as a federal magistrate judge in the Middle District of Florida from 1991 to 2000. His earlier career included work as a county prosecutor in Michigan and as an assistant U.S. attorney in both Michigan and Florida.
He earned his undergraduate degree from the University of Detroit in 1971 and his law degree there in 1973. By the time of the Morales ruling, Steele had spent roughly 35 years on the federal bench.
His final days now leave two separate questions hanging in the air.
One is legal: whether ICE could have supplied stronger evidence that Morales’ removal was actually progressing and therefore justified continued detention.
The other is personal: what caused Judge Steele’s sudden death at 77.
The first question can be argued from the court record.
The second cannot be answered until more information is released.
Steele’s order can be criticized. His death can be regarded as deeply startling.
Neither fact gives anyone permission to invent the missing pieces.
Here is what the public record supports: a Clinton-appointed federal judge ordered a convicted plane hijacker released from ICE custody, a member of Congress moved to impeach him, and within days the judge’s death was reported.
That sequence is extraordinary enough without adding a single unsupported word.
This is a Guest Post from our friends over at WLTReport. View the original article here.
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