Supreme Court allows Trump to restart swift deportation of migrants away from their home countries
- On June 23, 2025, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a ruling permitting the Trump administration to proceed with the expedited removal of eight convicted individuals to third countries, including South Sudan.
- This decision came after a federal judge in Massachusetts blocked deportations in April, citing that migrants must have time to contest removals to dangerous countries without ties.
- South Sudan gained independence in 2011 but remains unstable and poor, with serious human rights issues and over 2.3 million displaced by ongoing conflict since 2013.
- The men scheduled for deportation were notified less than a day before their flight to South Sudan, which was subsequently diverted to a U.S. naval facility located in Djibouti due to ongoing legal disputes and harsh conditions.
- The ruling minimizes due process for deportees and may expose migrants to harm without sufficient legal protections, drawing strong dissent from liberal justices and immigration advocates.
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226 Articles
The judges of the Supreme Court limited the time of appeal for deportation proceedings, which could facilitate actions against immigrants
SCOTUS is allowing Trump’s administration to 'defy the justice system as it pleases'
The U.S. Supreme Court, on Monday, June 23, halted a lower federal court ruling that blocked President Donald Trump's administration from deporting people to countries other than their own without 15 days' notice. And Barack Obama-appointed Justice Sonia Sotomayor was downright scathing in her dissent, writing, "The government has made clear in word and deed that it feels itself unconstrained by law, free to deport anyone, anywhere without notic…
Trump To Deport Migrants To War-Torn & Conflict Zones » Sons of Liberty Media
United States ruler, Donald Trump will be deporting migrants to war-torn third countries such as South Sudan in Africa, regardless of where they were born or came from before entering the U.S. The US Supreme Court has authorized the White House to deport immigrants to Libya as well. The decision handed down on Monday lifts …
Rep. Andy Ogles discusses immigration, national security, and the Supreme Court's deportation rulings
Congressman Andy Ogles from Tennessee shares his insights on pressing issues such as immigration, national security, and the recent Supreme Court ruling empowering the president's authority to deport individuals. Congressman Ogles discusses the implications of these rulings, the threat of sleeper cells in the U.S., and the importance of passing the 'big beautiful bill' to secure the border and strengthen the economy.
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