A federal judge on Saturday said the Trump administration appears to be “end” a US court order. First I’ll send it to Ghanait was poised to relocate them to a country that could face torture or death.
US District Judge Tanya Chukkan ordered the government to detail Ghana’s attempt to violate domestic court orders and not send immigrants elsewhere on Saturday night. One of the plaintiffs had already been shipped from Ghana to his hometown of Gambia, where a US court ruled that he would not be sent, ACLU’s Lee Gererund told Chukkan.
Justice Department Elianis Perez admitted to telling Chukkan in court that he vowed that Ghana would not happen on Friday. However, she argued that Chetkan had no power to control how other countries handle decoy. She said the US Supreme Court ruled this summer. The government can send immigrants Even if they had no opportunity to raise their fear of torture, they were not from their country of origin.
However, Gelernt compared the case with the case of Kilmer Abrego Garciathe Trump administration claimed that despite a court order banning it, he was mistakenly deported to El Salvador, which could not bring him back. After several courts instructed the administration to “promote” his return, Abrego Garcia eventually returned to the United States, where he is currently fighting trafficking charges, with Trump pushing to deport him.
“This seems like a concrete plan to end these duties,” Chatkan said of the administration. Ships immigrants to Ghana. “What is the government going to do? And don’t say we don’t have control over Ghana, as I know.”
Chukkan later submitted a declaration detailing the attempt to issue an order to the administration until 9pm in the eastern part of the country to prevent other migrants from being improperly sent from Ghana to their home country.