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Deported Venezuelan imprisoned in El Salvador files formal complaint against US

Deported Venezuelan imprisoned in El Salvador files formal complaint against US

Reuters2 days ago
WASHINGTON, July 24 (Reuters) - A Venezuelan man filed a formal complaint on Thursday against the U.S. government for sending him to El Salvador's most notorious prison, a new legal strategy that could be duplicated by others who have said they were falsely accused of gang membership by President Donald Trump's administration.
Neiyerver Adrián Leon Rengel, 27, filed what it called an administrative complaint with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, contending that federal employees wrongfully removed him from the United States without cause or due process.
Rengel's complaint, which seeks $1.3 million in monetary damages, is not a lawsuit brought in a court but rather an action filed with the government alleging a violation of law. It is the first of its kind brought by one of the 252 Venezuelan men who were deported by the Trump administration to El Salvador in March.
He invoked the Federal Tort Claims Act, a U.S. law that allows people to sue the U.S. government for wrongful acts committed by federal employees acting within the scope of their employment. Under that law, a complaint must be filed with the appropriate agency before a lawsuit can be brought.
The government now has six months to investigate and respond to Rengel's complaint. If it denies his claim or fails to respond in that time period, Rengel could then sue in federal court.
The Republican president, who campaigned in last year's election on a pledge of mass deportations, in March invoked a 1798 statute called the Alien Enemies Act as part of an effort to quickly deport alleged Venezuelan gang members to El Salvador.
The law authorizes the president to deport, detain or place restrictions on individuals whose primary allegiance is to a foreign power and who might pose a national security risk in wartime. The U.S. government last invoked the Alien Enemies Act, which historically has been employed only during wartime, during World War Two to intern and deport people of Japanese, German and Italian descent.
The Venezuelan deportees were held incommunicado in El Salvador's maximum security CECOT prison until they were returned to Venezuela last week as part of a prisoner swap between the United States and Venezuela.
Family and friends of some of them said the deportees were not gang members and were wrongly accused based on tattoos, hand gestures and clothing. Venezuelan government officials and deportees have said they were tortured in prison.
Rengel's lawyers said in the complaint that, because of his tattoos, DHS employees detained him in the parking lot of his apartment in Irving, Texas, and falsely accused him of membership in the Venezuelan Tren de Aragua gang.
Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin in a statement on Thursday reiterated the U.S. government's claim that Rengel was associated with Tren de Aragua and said he was "deemed a public safety threat." McLaughlin said Trump and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem "will not allow foreign terrorist enemies to operate in our country and endanger Americans."
Rengel alleged that, after moving him to a detention center, DHS employees lied to him, telling him he was being sent to Venezuela.
"Instead, for more than four months, Rengel languished in El Salvador – which is not his country of origin and a place where he has no ties – where he suffered physical, verbal and psychological abuse," the complaint said.
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Israel announces ‘tactical pause' in fighting in parts of Gaza as IDF sets up ‘designated humanitarian corridors'
Israel announces ‘tactical pause' in fighting in parts of Gaza as IDF sets up ‘designated humanitarian corridors'

Scottish Sun

time28 minutes ago

  • Scottish Sun

Israel announces ‘tactical pause' in fighting in parts of Gaza as IDF sets up ‘designated humanitarian corridors'

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Trump back on the golf course for day two of Scottish visit
Trump back on the golf course for day two of Scottish visit

BBC News

time28 minutes ago

  • BBC News

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When Donald Trump stared into laser beams that could have blinded him, he revealed his weak point
When Donald Trump stared into laser beams that could have blinded him, he revealed his weak point

Scotsman

time33 minutes ago

  • Scotsman

When Donald Trump stared into laser beams that could have blinded him, he revealed his weak point

Sign up to our daily newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... 'No one speaks to Mr Trump!' These words were my first introduction to the man who would one day become President of the United States, twice. I produced the opening ceremony of his first casino resort, the Taj Mahal, in Atlantic City, New Jersey, and I asked for a word with the owner so I could provide him with a briefing about health and safety before he would walk onstage to greet his 10,000 new employees as high-powered laser beams projected coloured light above his head. 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These salesmen of political passion offer their supporters a version of the 'emperor's new clothes', with their boundless confidence, endless ideas about how they will punish their rivals and enemies. And this is often delivered through large rallies just as another strongman did in 1930s' Germany before he murdered over six million Jews, Roma people, homosexuals and virtually anyone who was not a member of the Aryan race. When nation states or even local communities feel powerless, they seek personalities who exude the feeling of power and appear to be able to make strong, populist decisions. The problem with this choice is that often these strongmen are ill equipped to rule effectively in the long term – largely because of a combination of their ignorance and rapidly increasing arrogance after winning power – and they begin to make fatal errors that usually result in their eventual downfall. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Whether in the halls of Westminster, Holyrood, or within our local authorities, we need political leaders who can admit they do not have all the answers and who are prepared to seek the advice of experts, not those who stand upon a fragile soapbox of political rhetoric and fleeting charisma while seeking to persuade their supporters to accept their often ill-conceived and short-term ideas. Trump's lack of Enlightenment America's current political illusionist has arrived in our bonnie land, which was the birthplace of his mother Mary. I often wonder how much he really knows about Scotland and our storied past, stretching back to great thinkers of the Scottish Enlightenment such as Adam Smith and David Hume. I doubt if he or his so-called advisors – who still appear to be 'Yes' men and women in the style of those that I met – know very much about Smith's Theory of Moral Sentiments. 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