Supreme Court allows Trump to restart swift deportation of migrants away from their home countries
- On June 23, 2025, the U.S. Supreme Court lifted a lower court injunction, allowing the Trump administration to continue sending migrants to nations other than their home countries for deportation.
- This ruling reversed a prior order requiring migrants destined for third countries to have notice and an opportunity to contest removal due to safety concerns, amid legal challenges over due process.
- Migrants have been deported primarily to El Salvador, Libya, and South Sudan, countries often unrelated to their nationality and sometimes politically unstable, raising safety and legal questions.
- Justice Sonia Sotomayor and two liberal justices dissented, calling the majority's ruling a 'gross abuse' and warning that thousands could suffer violence in remote locations without proper legal protections.
- The ruling enables a key part of the administration's mass deportation plans, implicating broader immigration policy and ongoing disputes over migrants' constitutional rights and international protections.
195 Articles
195 Articles
A new U.S. Supreme Court decision enabled the Trump administration to continue its policy of deporting migrants to third countries, i.e. alternative nations to those of their origin.The ruling represents a key victory for the White House.The Supreme Court ruling and the endorsement of deportations without noticeThe Supreme Court overturned on Monday a previous order from a lower court blocking deportations to countries not designated as the orig…
Parents of US citizen kids in San Diego could face deportation
In San Diego County, more than 56,000 kids live with at least one parent who is in the U.S. unlawfully, according to a research estimate. This content Under Trump, more San Diego kids risk losing their parents or their country to deportation appeared first on inewsource.
Revoked the injunction of the federal judge of Boston appointed by Joe Biden: against the democratic robes.Whether he keeps his electoral promises or not, Donald Trump is always in the crosshairs of opponents. Especially now that he has managed to carry out one of the most important commitments he assumed...
CT Senator Calls Due Process 'A Moral Obligation' After Supreme Court Deportation Ruling
The recent Supreme Court decision that allows the deportation of undocumented immigrants to third-party countries.outside their country of origin violates the most fundamental constitutional right to due process, according to state Sen. Sujata Gadkar-Wilcox, D-Trumbull.
Exiling refugees: Supreme Court once more gives Trump wide power on deportations
It is cruel and nonsensical to deport people, not back to their countries of origin, but to third countries without proper notice or any way to appeal. But that’s what the Trump administration wants to do and that’s what the Supreme Court this week wrongly OKed in a one-paragraph order. One of these cases involved a group of men the government tried to send to South Sudan, a nation on the brink of civil war; a lower court judge kept blocking the…
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