Latest news with #Petitioner
Yahoo
25-06-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
Court orders Trump administration to return another wrongly deported man
A federal appeals court in New York on Tuesday ordered the Trump administration to 'facilitate' the return of a Salvadoran man deported last month to his native country just minutes after the same court ruled he shouldn't be removed from the US. An order issued by judges from the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit stated the government must facilitate the return of Jordin Melgar-Salmeron, 31, 'as soon as possible.' Melgar-Salmeron, who was deported in May, is at least the fourth individual to have been wrongly removed from the US, despite court rulings or protected status, amid the administration's vast deportation efforts. Tuesday's order noted that a stay of removal for Melgar-Salmeron was issued on May 7 at 9:52 a.m. but that a flight carrying him to El Salvador departed approximately 30 minutes later. 'The Government represents that Petitioner was removed that day due to 'a confluence of administrative errors,'' the order read, pointing to the government's acknowledgment in earlier court documents that a 'perfect storm of errors occurred to allow for Petitioner's untimely, and inadvertent, removal, despite the Government's assurance and the eventual stay order.' The judges also stated the government must file within a week a supplemental declaration addressing Melgar-Salmeron's current physical location and custodial status and include what steps the government will take, 'and when, to facilitate his return to the United States.' Melgar-Salmeron's case comes weeks after another wrongly deported man, Kilmar Abrego Garcia, was returned to the US after being removed to El Salvador despite a 2019 court order barring his removal. Abrego Garcia, who faces a federal indictment for smuggling undocumented migrants across state lines in 2022, has been described as a vessel for the Justice Department's hardball approach to immigration enforcement. He has pleaded not guilty to taking part in a smuggling conspiracy. In Tuesday's order, the court denied a request by Melgar-Salmeron's lawyers to appoint a special master to investigate authorities and officials involved in the wrongful deportation.
Yahoo
27-05-2025
- General
- Yahoo
Will the U.S. Supreme Court grant a stay of execution for Mississippi man on death row?
Mississippi's oldest prisoner on death row has filed an emergency stay of execution with the U.S. Supreme Court, asking for a last-minute reprieve. Richard Gerald Jordan, who turned 79 on May 25, is scheduled for execution on June 25. Jordan has been on death row in Mississippi since 1977 for the 1976 kidnapping and murder of Edwina Marter, the wife of a Gulfport bank executive. His attorneys are questioning the constitutionality of his death sentence, saying he was never given "the assistance of an expert 'sufficiently available to the defense' to assist in evaluating and preparing a mitigation case based on Petitioner's mental condition," according to the application for the stay filed May 21. What to know: Mississippi has an execution scheduled. How is it done? What is the process? "Petitioner was examined by a psychiatrist whose report was provided to the prosecution and then used against Petitioner during his sentencing proceedings." Jordan also is still awaiting the outcome of a petition for a writ of certiorari from the U.S. Supreme Court. "If this execution is not stayed pending disposition of this case, Petitioner will undeniably suffer irreparable harm," his attorneys said in court documents. "This is an 'irremediable' harm because 'execution is the most irremediable and unfathomable of penalties.'" Death row: Mississippi man to be executed in June asks state court to reconsider elements of his case In addition, executing Jordan before the U.S. Supreme Court rules on the petition would mean the Mississippi Supreme Court would be stripping power from the nation's highest court by rendering its decision moot, Jordan's attorneys wrote. Jordan's attorneys hope the U.S. Supreme Court will consider Jordan's petition at its May 29 conference. Lici Beveridge is a reporter for the Hattiesburg American and Clarion Ledger. Contact her at lbeveridge@ Follow her on X @licibev or Facebook at This article originally appeared on Mississippi Clarion Ledger: Mississippi death row inmate asks SCOTUS for stay of execution