Justice Department uses Maduro case to defend Trump’s use of Alien Enemies Act for deportations
16 Articles
16 Articles
Venezuelan Migrants In U.S. Face Deportation Uncertainty After Maduro Capture
Hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan migrants in the United States remain at risk of deportation despite the U.S. capture of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro. The Trump administration has made clear that immigration policy toward Venezuelans has not changed. Officials say deportations will continue, including through the use of the Alien Enemies Act, citing Maduro’s indictment and Venezuela’s improving conditions following U.S. intervention. 600,…
The US Justice Department, Fake Cartels, and Maduro
The Trump administration is increasingly resembling a government previously abominated by the current US president as entangling, bumbling, and prone to fantasies. President George W. Bush was well versed in baseless existential threats stemming from Mesopotamia, supposedly directed by the Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein. There was a critical problem in this assessment: in his dry drunk state, Bush was criminally wrong, proposing a doctrine in res…
Hours after the overthrown Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro was formally charged with narcoterrorism and other crimes in New York, the Department of Justice used the formal indictment in a federal court 2,099 kilometers away to defend...
Justice Department uses Maduro case to defend Trump’s use of Alien Enemies Act for deportations
Hours after ousted Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro was formally charged with narcoterrorism and other offenses in New York, the Justice Department used the indictment at a federal courthouse 1,300 miles away in its effort to defend President Donald Trump’s ability to use a wartime authority to speed up some deportations.
Mirko C. Trudeau The U.S. Department of Justice changed the criminal charge against Nicolás Maduro: it stopped pointing him out as the leader of the so-called "Cartel de los Soles", an organization that now no longer defines as a drug cartel. In a corrected document, the Department of Justice changed the narrative and described the case as a "customerism system" and a network of state corruption, not as a formal criminal structure.The modificati…
The Brazilian government assessed that Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro's deposition does not constitute an isolated episode and is included in a broader context, marked by what diplomats describe as a new concept of expansionist character associated with the U.S. President Donald Trump. According to GLOBO's interviewers, the previous open by the American attack on the neighbouring country is “dangerous” and demands an article-based response …
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