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Trump's Immigration Crackdown Clashes With Right to Due Process

Trump's Immigration Crackdown Clashes With Right to Due Process

El Paso immigration judge Michael S. Pleters was incredulous. He had expected to hear a request from Henrry Albornoz Quintero for political asylum in the U.S., but though the Venezuelan had been held by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, he was absent the day of his April hearing.
'He's disappeared? What happened?' the judge asked.
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Migrants who were sent to CECOT are the responsibility of US, El Salvador tells UN

time7 hours ago

Migrants who were sent to CECOT are the responsibility of US, El Salvador tells UN

Over 200 migrants who were sent to El Salvador's CECOT mega-prison under accusations that they were members of a violent criminal gang are the responsibility of the United States, the government of El Salvador told a United Nations working group. El Salvador's claims, outlined in a report submitted Monday in court, appear to contradict what President Donald Trump and administration officials have been saying for months: that they are unable to return any of the migrants sent to CECOT because they're under El Salvador's authority. "In this context, the jurisdiction and legal responsibility for these persons lie exclusively with the competent foreign authorities, by virtue of international agreements signed and in accordance with the principles of sovereignty and international cooperation in criminal matters," El Salvador officials said in their report to the U.N. El Salvador's comments were made in a report submitted in a court filing by the United Nations Office of The High Commissioner for Human Rights Working Group, which was investigating the "disappearances" of four Venezuelan men who were thought to have been sent to the country in March. To date, the Trump administration has not released a list of those sent to El Salvador. "The Salvadoran State emphatically states that its authorities have not arrested, detained, or transferred the persons referred to in the communications of the Working Group, " the El Salvador officials said in the report. "The actions of the State of El Salvador have been limited to the implementation of a bilateral cooperation mechanism with another State, through which it has facilitated the use of the Salvadoran prison infrastructure for the custody of persons detained within the scope of the justice system and law enforcement of that other State." The Trump administration invoked the Alien Enemies Act -- an 18th century wartime authority used to remove noncitizens with little-to-no due process -- to deport two planeloads of alleged migrant gang members to El Salvador by arguing that the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua is a "hybrid criminal state" that is invading the United States. The migrants were sent to CECOT as part of a $6 million deal the Trump administration made with Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele for El Salvador to house migrant detainees as part of Trump's immigration crackdown. Attorneys for the ACLU who are representing the original case challenging the AEA removals -- filed in March as the men were en route to CECOT -- said they became aware of the document last week through one of the families of the men. The attorneys accuse the government of withholding the information despite previous requests the ACLU made for documents related to the administration's arrangement with El Salvador.

Hakeem Jeffries tells ‘The View' ICE is going after ‘law-abiding immigrant families'
Hakeem Jeffries tells ‘The View' ICE is going after ‘law-abiding immigrant families'

New York Post

time7 hours ago

  • New York Post

Hakeem Jeffries tells ‘The View' ICE is going after ‘law-abiding immigrant families'

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries said Monday on 'The View' that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) was going after 'law-abiding immigrant families,' and didn't dismiss calls from other members of his party to defund it. 'The View' co-host Alyssa Farah Griffin pressed Jeffries on whether he supported calls to defund ICE and if it was an effective message for Democrats heading into the 2026 midterms. 'Well, I definitely think that we need aggressive oversight as it relates to the overly aggressive behavior that we're seeing from ICE, from the Department of Homeland Security,' Jeffries, D-NY, told the hosts. 'Donald Trump and Republicans promised to go after violent felons, but instead they're going after law-abiding immigrant families. And in fact, in some cases, deporting American citizens and children, some with cancer. And America is better than this, and that's the reality,' Jeffries continued. Jeffries also responded to a question from co-host Ana Navarro, who pressed him on what he would say to Latinos who feel hopeless about the Trump administration's immigration policies. 4 'The View' co-host Alyssa Farah Griffin pressed Jeffries on whether he supported calls to defund ICE and if it was an effective message for Democrats. ABC 4 'Donald Trump and Republicans promised to go after violent felons, but instead they're going after law-abiding immigrant families,' Jeffries said. Getty Images 4 Co-host Ana Navarro pressed him on what he would say to Latinos who feel hopeless about the Trump administration's immigration policies. Chelsea Lauren/Shutterstock 'We are seeing sort of an unprecedented flood of extremism being unleashed on the American people, and it's happened from the very beginning,' he said of Trump. 'But I think we can never lose hope in the resilience of the American people to face turbulence, and this is an incredibly turbulent moment, but to power our way through it and to come out stronger on the other side. It's not to say it's going to be easy. It will be challenging, but I still believe in the fundamental goodness of the American people,' Jeffries added. 4 'We are seeing sort of an unprecedented flood of extremism being unleashed on the American people,' Jeffries said. ABC Jeffries said it was important to secure the border, but also said Congress needed to fix the broken immigration system. He told the co-hosts, 'As House Democrats, our view is that while we work on making sure that the border can remain secure, while we work to fix our broken immigration system, we also are going to stand up for dreamers, farm workers and for law-abiding immigrant families at all times.'

LA mayor Karen Bass confronts heavily armed federal agents conducting apparent immigration sweep in park
LA mayor Karen Bass confronts heavily armed federal agents conducting apparent immigration sweep in park

New York Post

time7 hours ago

  • New York Post

LA mayor Karen Bass confronts heavily armed federal agents conducting apparent immigration sweep in park

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass confronted a group of heavily armed federal agents conducting an apparent immigration sweep at a local park on Monday, demanding law enforcement leave the greenspace. Officers with Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Customs and Border Protection and the military units deployed by President Trump arrived at MacArthur Park in force, with the agents seen carrying rifles and traveling across the grounds on foot, horseback and in armored vehicles. Bass, who was due to meet with California Gov. Gavin Newsom in the morning, showed up in the middle of the operation to yell at the agents to get out of the park, slamming the demonstration as a 'political stunt.' 6 LA Mayor Karen Bass confronted border officers operating a sweep across MacArthur Park on Monday. AP 6 Officers on horseback rode around the park, disrupting services for its homeless inhabitants, according to the St. John's Community Health Center. AP 'They need to leave and they need to leave right now!' Bass yelled after getting off the phone with someone coordinating the officers. 'What I saw in the park today looked like a city under siege,' she told reporters following the confrontation. 'It's outrageous and un-American to have armed vehicles in our American parks.' Bass was only at the park momentarily after speaking with CBP Assistant Chief Patrol Agent David Kim, who handed her a direct line to 'the head of customs,' she added, noting that the agents left moments later. Bass and members of the LA City Council said the sweep disrupted a children's summer camp, with the children corralled into a nearby basement while waiting for the agents to leave. 6 The armed forces arrived in armored vehicles, vans and SUVs in an apparent show of force. Chelsea Lauren/Shutterstock 6 The agents were seen marching across an empty soccer field where a children's summer camp session was behing held. X/@MayorOfLA The raid also pushed out members of the St. John's Community Health Center who were conducting their daily check ups with homeless individuals at the park, officials added. The mayor also went onto X to vent about the operation at MacArthur, posting time-lapse video of the agents marching across an empty soccer field inside the park. 'Minutes before, there were more than 20 kids playing — then, the MILITARY comes through,' she said of the raid. 6 Horse-mounted Border Patrol agents at MacArthur Park. AP 'The SECOND I heard about this, I went to the park to speak to the person in charge to tell them it needed to end NOW. Absolutely outrageous,' Bass added. It remains unclear if anyone was arrested during the sweep, as activists had gone around the park to warn people to leave before the officers marched through, the Los Angeles Times reported. 'I think the goal is to spread fear,' Bass said of Monday's raid at the park, as she vowed to uphold the city's status as a sanctuary for immigrants. 6 Bass condemned the deployment at the park as a 'political stunt' and vowed that LA would remain a sanctuary city. AP The LA Police Department said it was unaware of the federal operation going on at MacArthur Park. CBP, which led the operation, did not immediately respond to The Post's request for comment. The Department of Homeland Security said it does not comment on ongoing enforcement operations. Los Angeles has become a hotbed for the Trump administration's immigration policy, with the city seeing chaotic raids and protests unfold last month. The Trump administration has since sued the city, claiming LA is obstructing immigration enforcement operations through its sanctuary city policies. Bass said the city was mounting its own legal challenges against Trump over the raids and deployment of troops in LA.

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