With ruling no. 15755, filed on April 22, 2025, the Court of Cassation intervenes once again on the delicate balance between public security and the personal freedom of irregular foreigners. The case originates from a decree validating the detention issued by the Justice of the Peace of Milan pursuant to art. 14, paragraph 4, of Legislative Decree 286/1998, subsequently appealed to the Court of Cassation after the prefectural expulsion decree had been annulled in court. The Supreme Court annuls the restrictive measure without referral due to the subsequent lack of a legal basis.
The regulation of administrative detention has been recently amended by Decree-Law of October 11, 2024, no. 145, converted into Law 187/2024. The text has extended the cases and maximum duration of detention, raising questions of compatibility with art. 13 of the Constitution and art. 5 of the ECHR. Despite the expansion of prefectural powers, the purely executive purpose of the measure remains firm: to ensure the removal of the foreigner subject to an expulsion or rejection order.
In the matter of administrative detention of foreign nationals under the procedural regime following Decree-Law of October 11, 2024, no. 145, converted, with amendments, by Law of December 9, 2024, no. 187, the judicial annulment of the prefectural expulsion decree, which occurred during the appeal to the Court of Cassation against the decree validating the detention adopted by the Justice of the Peace pursuant to art. 14, paragraph 4, of Legislative Decree of July 25, 1998, no. 286, entails the annulment without referral also of the latter measure due to the subsequent lack of a legal basis, given that the detention measure is always instrumental to the execution of an expulsion or rejection decree.
Comment: The Court reiterates that personal freedom can only be restricted if strictly necessary for the execution of a valid measure. When the expulsion measure ceases to exist, the detention loses its raison d'être and becomes illegitimate. This principle, in line with art. 5 ECHR, strengthens judicial oversight of restrictive measures and requires the Public Administration to constantly monitor the persistence of the prerequisites.
The ruling offers strategic insights for those defending the rights of foreigners:
This is not the first time the Court of Cassation has affirmed the ancillary nature of detention: rulings no. 9556/2025 and no. 2967/2025 – cited by the Court itself – had already outlined the same principle. However, today's decision consolidates this orientation within the framework of the new Decree-Law 145/2024, hindering expansive interpretations that could create "detentions without cause."
Ruling 15755/2025 represents an important safeguard for the personal freedom of foreigners, acting as a barrier against the drifts of a system that risks chronicizing administrative detention. For legal practitioners, this is an authoritative precedent to refer to in courtrooms and in negotiations with administrative authorities, with a view to an effective balance between security needs and fundamental rights.