Trump admin cuts time for migrants to file deportation appeal in half
- An unsealed document revealed the Trump administration set a 12-hour window for migrants to challenge deportation.
- The administration is using the 1798 Alien Enemies Act for deportations amid ongoing legal challenges.
- Under this policy, migrants must express intent to file a habeas petition within 12 hours of receiving notice.
- The document states aliens receive "no less than 12 hours" to indicate intent to file.
- Critics question if this limited time provides reasonable opportunity for migrants to seek legal relief.
15 Articles
15 Articles
ICE would give immigrants subject to the Foreign Enemies Act 12 hours to say if they plan to challenge deportation
By Priscilla Alvarez, Devan Cole and John Fritze, CNN A new, unsealed court filing provides the first detailed look at how the Trump administration is trying to carry out deportations under the Foreign Enemies Act after the Supreme Court gave the administration permission to use it whenever people had “reasonable time” to challenge it.
The Supreme Court’s Unilateral Ruling Ending President Trump’s Deportations Goes Against The Will Of The People ⋆ Conservative Firing Line
The following article, The Supreme Court’s Unilateral Ruling Ending President Trump’s Deportations Goes Against The Will Of The People, was first published on Conservative Firing Line. In a sweeping move last Saturday, the Supreme Court ended all deportations of illegal aliens by President Donald Trump under the 1798 Alien Enemy Act by a 7-2 ruling, with only two justices, Justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas, dissenting. The move blocks Pr…
TheVoiceOfJoyce ICE allotted $40 Billion for detention Camps, while most Agencies gutted?
ICE Awarded a $3.8 Billion Contract to Hold Immigrants on a Military Base. Days Later, It Was Canceled. by Jeff Ernsthausen, Mica Rosenberg and Avi Asher-Schapiro ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox. In an unusual move, the administration of President Donald Trump has canceled a $3.8 billion contract to build an immigrant detention camp…
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