
The Trump presidency was first to be prohibited from flying three Venezuelan illegal immigrants to Guantanamo Bay Naval Base in Cuba after a federal judge blocked their entry.
Judge Kenneth J. Gonzales wrote in the decision that” the bare doubt the government has created regarding the availability of legal procedure and lawyers exposure is enough to grant the humble order.”
The three unnamed Venezuelan illegal immigrants at the heart of the legal case are just one of the hundreds to thousands who could face deportation to Venezuela in exchange for being sent to Guantanamo.
The Center for Constitutional Rights, the American Civil Liberties Union of New Mexico, and the Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center all filed the lawsuit.
Last Friday, Kristi Noem, the secretary of homeland security, traveled to Guantanamo to visit the immigrant camps that the military had begun erecting. A total of 50 immigrants have been flown to Guantanamo to date.
Since Donald Trump took office on January 20th, according to White House border czar Tom Homan, who reported last Thursday that 11, 000 illegal immigrants have been detained all over the country.
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Both the White House and Venezuelan dictator Nicolas Maduro have resumed normal relations, including with Nayib Bukele, president of El Salvador, and he has agreed to retake back Tren de Aragua gang members.
The United States has for the time being decided to transfer the most dangerous illegal immigrants to the Cuban naval base. Noem claims that at least two planes have been dispatched to Guantanamo since last week.
I recently witnessed first-hand criminal aliens being unloaded off a flight at GITMO while I was in Cuba.
My message to criminal alien murderers, rapists, child predators and gangsters: do not come to this country or we will hunt you down, find you, and lock you up. pic. twitter.com/BokRSqp4kr