U.S. government orders to bring Maryland residents back after “total inability to” deportation

The U.S. government’s decision to arrest a Maryland man and send him to the notorious prison in El Salvador seems to be “absolutely lawless.”
U.S. District Court Judge Paula Xinis wrote that there is little evidence that Kilmar Abrego Garcia once had been in the MS-13 street gang, or in particular, “put him to one of the most dangerous prisons in the Western Hemisphere,” U.S. District Court Judge Paula Xinis wrote.
Sinis said an immigration judge had explicitly banned Abrego Garcia, 29, of the United States from visiting his hometown of El Salvador, in 2019, where he could face persecution from local gangs.
The White House described Abrego Garcia’s deportation as an “administrative error” but also made him a member of the MS-13 gang.
The Justice Department has asked the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals to suspend Sinis’s ruling.
Judges are dissatisfied with the government’s inaction
She said the government had argued that it was “conspicuous” because he was no longer detained in the United States and could not be forced to take Abreg Garcia back.
“They did stick to the amazing claim that they could forcefully deport anyone (immigrants and American citizens) to prisons outside the United States and then bald assert that they could not achieve their rewards because they were no longer ‘custodians’ and the court thus lacked jurisdiction.”
An immigration judge denied Abrego Garcia’s asylum claim in October 2019 but granted him protection from being deported to El Salvador. He was released after Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
Abrego Garcia then married U.S. citizen Jennifer Vasquez Sura, the couple are the parents of their son and her two children.
Vasquez Sura said in court documents that their young autistic son seeks comfort in the smell of his missing father’s clothes since his arrest on March 12.
The Trump administration touted an immigration crackdown that included placing bound immigrants on U.S. military aircraft, expanding agents to arrest people who are illegal in the country or conditions that the administration believes are violated by their work or student visas.
“I’m all for it”: Trump uses El Salvador prison
The Trump administration welcomes a deal with El Salvador, which will recently expel the huge terrorist detention center or Cecot Prison in the United States.
“If they can go for a lot less money than we’re paying, I’ll give it all. I don’t know what the law has to say about it,” Trump told reporters later Sunday.
The Trump administration has expelled more than 200 immigrants by invoking the Alien Enemy Act, a wartime measure, saying they are members of Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragya. Andrew Chang explains how Trump interprets the language of the 1798 law to avoid the standard immigration court system and why experts say it is a slippery slope.
Trump invoked the Alien Enemy Act of 1798 last month to justify flights carrying 261 deported oil, including 137 Venezuelans.
The Trump administration has begun to get closer and closer to launching a war with immigrants, most notably by designating eight Latin American criminal groups, including Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua as “foreign terrorist organizations.”
But soon, the story begins to surface, that is, the scene is not as good as it looks. Some of them have long insisted that they have no gang contacts and their families have produced documents showing they have no criminal records.
The government also seems to rely on tattoos to assess some of them as gang members.
U.S. District Court Judge James Boasberg, who heard the legal challenge to the group’s deportation, urged the Justice Department to interpret its actions and criticized the government for criticizing confidentiality and acting “in a malicious” capacity. Even if Boasberg ordered them to stop, at least one flight took off.
Boasberg said he could have issued a ruling as early as this week on whether anyone has defied the court’s violation of the court’s order.
“I’ve been doing it for a long time, and I’ve seen something weird,” said Texas attorney John Dutton. “But do it in the middle of the night, sending people to another country and going straight to prison without being convicted?” This makes no sense. ”
Gay makeup artist deported
Venezuelan makeup artist Andry Jose Hernandez Romero is one of those trapped in mass deportation. His boss fled the country last summer after he publicly slapped him on a state-run news channel.
Romero, who hopes to find a new life in the United States, schedules dates at the U.S. border crossing in San Diego using the U.S. Customs and Border Protection Phone App.
Reminder this is Andre. He is a professional makeup artist in Venezuela. He has no criminal history. Since he was 7 years old, he has been in the theater troupe and likes beauty pageants. His family was upset and missed him. He sat in El Salvador’s cell tonight. #freeandry pic.twitter.com/twmltcbcd6
That’s where he was asked about tattoos and where his troubles began.
U.S. immigration authorities use a series of “gang identifiers” to help them discover members of Tren de Aragua. Some are obvious, such as drug trafficking with known Tren members.
Some of the identifiers are even more surprising: According to government teaching materials submitted by the ACLU in court, the Chicago Bulls jersey, “high-end city streetwear”, and tattoos of clocks, stars or crowns.
According to documents and attorneys, tattoos are key to marking many deported people as Tren members.
Romero had a tattoo on every wrist when she was in her 20s. Next to one is “Mom”. Next to the other is “Dad”. According to his lawyer, Wang Crown also pays homage to the Christmas Day “Three Kings” in his hometown and his work in the pageant, where crowns are common.
Romero is now somewhere in Secott. 60 minutes – This said on Sunday night’s radio that it can’t find evidence of most people’s criminal records – in Cecot, photographed by Romero, which even his American lawyers have never seen.
Despite the controversy, the Trump administration is now urging the Supreme Court to allow the deportation of Venezuelan immigrants under the Foreign Enemy Act.