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On Saturday, Donald Trump evoked a centuries -old law for detention and deportation of members of the Venezuelan gang, but his executive order was quickly banned by a federal judge.
Trump’s order was martyred by the 1798 foreign enemies’ law to remove the members of the Venezuelan gang, Trin de Aragoa, who said it “infiltrated the United States illegally and dragged irregular war and executed hostile measures against the United States.”
This policy depends on the authority that was called the last time in World War II to train non-American citizens of Italian, German and Japanese-one of the most controversial episodes in American history.
On Saturday, James Bouasburg, an American federal judge in Colombia, on Saturday, banned the deportation of detained individuals who are underway for 14 days.
Boasberg said that the law that Trump called “does not provide the basis for the president’s declaration, given that the conditions of invasion and predatory penetration are regarding the hostile actions committed by any country and range from the war.”
The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The executive was the latest escalation in Trump’s aggressive association with immigration. The president promised to collective deportation during the implementation of a set of measures, including the pursuit of limiting the new nationality and announcing the state of national emergency on the borders of the United States and Mexico.
While the matter targets the members of Tren De Aragua, it states that “the Minister of Internal Security maintains a discretionary power to arrest any foreign enemy under any separate authority.” This means that the application of the law that critics say can highlight deportations while avoiding legal procedures.
“The summoning of the law of foreign enemies is a dangerous abuse of power aimed at depriving people of their legal rights,” said Alison McManos, Managing Director of National Security and Foreign Policy at the American Progress Center.
Last month, the government set Train de Aragoa a foreign terrorist organization, after Trump on the first day of his second presidency directed his government to assess a series of groups, including the Venezuelan gang of national security threats.
INTERPOL’s executive order was martyred in Washington, who said that “Trin de Aragoa has emerged as a major threat to the United States as it infiltrates the flow of migration from Venezuela.”
Trump’s order stated that the gang “continues to invade, try to invade and threaten the country” – often used by the president when describing the immigration policy.
Legal scientists have argued that the reference to illegal immigration as a “conquest” may grant Trump, under American law and the constitution, the extensive powers to collectively deport individuals or keep them in reservation without trial.
The executive order came hours after the American Civil Liberties Union filed a lawsuit on Saturday on behalf of five Venezuelan men in the reservation of immigration who fear the imminent removal if the law of foreign enemies was called.
The American Civil Liberties Union said in the court documents, adding that the statute concerned “has no opportunity for judicial review,” adding that the statute concerned was “a scale in wartime had been used only three times in the history of our nation: the 1812 war, the First World War and the Second World War.”
The government then submitted an appeal at the Colombia County Court, which challenges a previous temporary restriction order submitted by Judge Pasperj.
The US Department of Justice said in the court files: “This court must cut this huge unauthorized imposition on the authority of the executive authority to remove the dangerous foreigners who are threats to the American people.”
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