Attorneys have had no contact with migrants held at military base in Djibouti, groups tell Supreme Court
- Three ICE officers and eight convicted migrants remain housed in a shipping container on a U.S. Naval base in Djibouti under strict 24-hour surveillance.
- This development comes after Boston Judge Murphy’s late May directive required a flight transporting migrants to touch down in East Africa, and his May 22 decision that blocked deportations of migrants, citing a violation of a March court injunction.
- Pentagon officials warned of rocket strikes from Yemen's Houthi terrorists near Camp Lemonnier, where officers have faced toxic smog from local burn pits and delayed anti-malaria medication.
- Solicitor General Sauer filed an emergency appeal to the Supreme Court on May 27, emphasizing that the case involves the government’s effort to deport some of the most serious illegal immigrants amid the ongoing immigration crisis in the United States.
- The ruling by the lower court has resulted in migrants and ICE personnel being required to remain in Djibouti under unsafe conditions, prompting concerns about the welfare of officers and the government’s capacity to carry out deportations.
13 Articles
13 Articles
South Sudan deportations have placed migrants, and ICE officials, in danger: new court filing
A new court filing details nightmarish conditions for ICE officers and migrants held in South Sudan – including health hazards, burn pits and potential for rocket attacks from nearby terrorist groups.
ICE Reveals HELLISH Conditions For Agents Stuck in Djibouti After Biden Judge Orders Plane Carrying Illegals to South Sudan Grounded
Last month US District Judge Brian Murphy said the Trump Administration violated his court order to provide the aliens with “meaningful” due process since they were being sent to “third-party” countries.
ICE officers stranded in Djibouti under ‘outrageous’ conditions after court blocked criminal migrant deportations: source
Three Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers have been marooned in Djibouti with eight criminal migrants under "outrageous" living conditions and the threat of rocket attacks from Yemen after a federal judge barred the convicts' deportation to South Sudan, The Post has learned.
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