US Judge temporarily halts deportations to third countries without a chance to challenge
- A federal judge temporarily blocked the Trump administration from deporting individuals to third countries without allowing them to argue that their safety would be compromised.
- U.S. District Judge Brian E. Murphy stated that individuals with final orders of removal must have a meaningful opportunity to present their safety concerns.
- Advocacy groups, including the National Immigration Litigation Alliance, supported individuals fearing deportation to dangerous third countries, as ruled by Judge Murphy.
- Plaintiffs expressed fear of being sent to unsafe countries after immigration judges ruled it was unsafe for them to return to their homelands.
54 Articles
54 Articles


Deportation efforts see setback in federal court
A federal judge temporarily blocked the Trump administration Friday from deporting people, who exhausted their legal appeals, to countries other than their own without first allowing them to argue that it would jeopardize their safety.

Administration's deportation effort sees setback
A federal judge temporarily blocked the Trump administration Friday from deporting people, who exhausted their legal appeals, to countries other than their own without first allowing them to argue that it would jeopardize their safety.
Coastal Judges Play Keep-Away From The Fifth Circuit
Fights over forums are not new. Long before national injunctions flew from Amarillo and San Francisco, the executive branch sought to control were legal challenges could be filed. Perhaps the most prominent such recent example was Guantanamo Bay. The Bush Administration detained enemy combatants on the military base to avoid federal habeas jurisdiction. That plan, however, did not work out. In a series of cases leading to Boumedienne v. Bush (20…
US Judge Temporarily Halts Deportations to Third Countries Without a Chance to Challenge
A federal judge temporarily blocked the Trump administration Friday from deporting people who have exhausted legal appeals to countries other than their own without first being allowed to argue that it would jeopardize their safety.
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