Michael Jordan Jerseys, Tattoos: Trump's 'Alien Enemy' Guide Challenged by Lawyers
- Andry José Hernández Romero was detained in an immigration jail after leaving Venezuela, despite passing a preliminary asylum screening.
- Donald Trump invoked the Alien Enemies Act to deport Venezuelans linked to the gang Tren de Aragua, claiming they were a threat to the U.S.
- Attorneys from the ACLU claim tattoos are wrongly used as evidence for targeting Venezuelan immigrants for deportation to El Salvador.
- Immigration and Customs Enforcement has faced criticism for using tattoos as grounds for deportation, which ACLU lawyers argue is targeting innocent individuals.
6 Articles
6 Articles
The Makeup Artist Donald Trump Deported Under the Alien Enemies Act
Donald Trump has invoked the Alien Enemies Act to send Venezuelans to prison without due process. Among them is a thirty-one-year-old makeup artist whose only crime is having the wrong tattoos. Jonathan Blitzer reports.
Michael Jordan Jerseys, Tattoos: Trump's 'Alien Enemy' Guide Challenged by Lawyers
Venezuelan men wearing Michael Jordan jerseys and sporting tattoos have been unfairly branded as “alien enemy” gang members worthy of deportation, according to lawyers challenging the Trump administration.
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