A Texas judge temporarily blocks the deportation of three Venezuelans under the Law of Foreign Enemies | Immigration in the United States

by Andrea
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The judges do not lower their arms in. This Wednesday, a Federal Judge of Texas has temporarily blocked the deportation of three Venezuelans held in a state prison, accused of belonging to the gang known as the decision again challenges the president of the president to stop and expel the alleged members of this criminal gang in the United States from the country, through the invocation of the 1798. That rule was not used since World War Venezuelans to El Salvador in mid -March. This Monday, however, with some provisions to respect due process.

According to the most recent document, signed by Judge Fernando Rodríguez Jr., the Trump government tried to return Venezuela to the people in question during the past month of March, despite the fact that no immigration court has issued a definitive order of deportation against them. This new measure protects them from being expired in summary, without having been notified within a sufficient time to present a you have a bodyas established by the Supreme Court in his decision last Monday.

“If the United States erroneously expels one person to another country based on proclamation (of the law), there is a considerable probability that said person cannot be returned to the United States,” says the text. Likewise, it prohibits the Trump administration from transferring, relocating or expelling said Venezuelans from the detention center where they are, or transporting them out of the county without a court order.

The decision of Judge Rodríguez Jr. was taken in response to an emergency demand presented by the US Union for Civil Liberties (ACLU), in order to stop the deportations that are intended to be made under the old law designed for times of war and dusted by the Republican. ACLU argues that

Cecot, The Savior

One of them, for example, was: “A rose and a skull in the leg, that cover a tattoo of a monkey that he no longer liked, and an eye that a tattoo artist did.” This man, identified with the acronym JGG, was “abruptly and without any explanation” to the prison where he is currently, while waiting for a hearing on his request for immigration protection in California.

In the case of the detainee identified as Jav, the lawsuit states that, in fact, he was a victim of the criminal group, and that is one of the reasons why he cannot return to his native country. The other reason they express is because “he has suffered.” “Jav is HIV positive and requires access to daily medicines and constant medical care,” the text specifies.

The third plaintiff, WGH, requested political asylum in the United States after being “extorted and threatened by multiple criminal groups in Venezuela, including the Aragua train.” In his case, he had scheduled hearings in the Immigration Court for last March 12, but was not presented. Instead, the guards threatened that they would take him to a plane on March 15 or 16.

In New York, Judge Alvin K. Hellerstein said Wednesday that he plans to sign a temporary restriction order similar to the signed in Texas, to protect Venezuelans residing in the southern district of that city.

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