Supreme Court Greenlights Trump Admin Deportations To Third Countries

The U.S. Supreme Court approved the Trump administration’s request to pause a lower court injunction that had blocked deportations of individuals to third countries without prior notice.The decision marks a near-term victory for the administration as it aims to implement its immigration crackdown swiftly.

The Court ruled 6-3 in favor of staying the injunction, with Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, and Ketanji Brown Jackson dissenting.

The case involved a group of migrants contesting their deportations to third countries—nations other than their countries of origin.Earlier this month, lawyers representing these migrants urged the Supreme Court to uphold a ruling by U.S. District Judge Brian Murphy, who had ordered the Trump administration to keep all migrants facing deportation to third countries in U.S. custody until further review.

Advertisement

Murphy, based in Boston, oversaw a class-action lawsuit brought by migrants challenging deportations to countries such as South Sudan, El Salvador, Costa Rica, Guatemala, and others that the administration has reportedly considered in its ongoing deportation efforts.

Murphy ruled that migrants must stay in U.S. custody until they have the opportunity to undergo a “reasonable fear interview,” allowing them to explain to U.S. officials any fears of persecution or torture if released into the country.

Murphy emphasized that his order does not prevent Trump from “executing removal orders to third countries.” Rather, he clarified in a prior ruling that it “simply requires” the government to “comply with the law when carrying out” such removals, in accordance with the U.S. Constitution and in response to the Trump administration’s surge of last-minute removals and deportations.

Advertisement
In appealing the case to the Supreme Court, U.S. Solicitor General D. John Sauer argued that Murphy’s ruling had prevented the government from deporting “some of the worst of the worst illegal aliens,” including a group of migrants sent to South Sudan earlier this year without due process or prior notice.

In a separate argument, he reiterated that the migrants must remain in U.S. custody at a military base in Djibouti until each has the opportunity to undergo a “reasonable fear interview,” allowing them to explain to U.S. officials any fears of persecution or torture if released into South Sudanese custody.

U.S. judges have consistently ruled that the Trump administration violated due process by failing to notify migrants of their impending removals and denying them the opportunity to challenge their deportations in court, a stance the Supreme Court has upheld, albeit narrowly, on four separate occasions since Trump took office.

Meanwhile, White House officials have criticized so-called “activist” judges for pursuing a political agenda and have consistently rejected claims that illegal immigrants are entitled to due process protections.

As many as a dozen individuals from various countries, including Vietnam and Myanmar, were reportedly ordered deported to South Sudan, a move that lawyers for the immigrants previously contended was in “clear violation” of Murphy’s order.

“Fire up the deportation planes,” tweeted Assistant Deputy Secretary of Homeland Security Tricia McLaughlin.

VA

Related Posts

Grandfather Bram Faked Our Complete Poverty To Hide A Life Changing Secret

Two weeks after my grandfather Bram was laid to rest, a phone call from a stranger completely shattered everything I believed about my childhood. I was only six years old…

Read more

While I was overseas volunteering, my sister took my wedding dress and married my fiancé for his

The Dress That Wasn’t Supposed to Be There While I was overseas volunteering, my sister stole my wedding dress and married my fiancé for his money—with my parents’ full blessing….

Read more

At My Graduation My Grandma Asked About My 3 Million Trust Fund and My Parents Went Silent

The graduation ceremony was running long, the way they always do when the speeches are written by people who have confused length with meaning. I sat somewhere in the middle…

Read more

They Built a Runway Across My Farm They Didn’t Realize I Run the FAA

I drove out to Oklahoma expecting the kind of silence that feels like a clean sheet pulled tight over the world. Wind through corn, cattle somewhere beyond the rise, the…

Read more

An Elderly Couple Pretended to Be Homeless. Only the Daughter-in-Law Everyone Hated Opened the Door.

Peter Grayson stood in front of his bedroom mirror at seven o’clock on a Tuesday morning, staring at a stranger. At seventy-one years old, he’d always taken pride in his…

Read more

Doctors reveal 8 hidden habits that cause bad odor in older men

Body odor isn’t always a sign that someone isn’t taking care of themselves. That’s what makes it confusing—especially for many older men who follow the same hygiene routines they’ve had…

Read more

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *