US Justice orders Trump to reintegrate asylum deportedly deported
The Mexican authorities, in turn, deported the man back to Guatemala, where he now lives “in constant fear.” He says he never leaves home, and rarely sees his relatives. “Anything could happen to me on the street,” he said in the process.
In the decision published last night, federal judge Brian Murphy of the Boston District Court said the deportation of OCG “has no resemblance to due process of law.” “There is no suggestion that OCG is a threat to national security,” wrote Murphy. “In general, this case has no legal circumstance, only the horror of a man mistakenly embedded on a bus and sent back to a country where he had just been raped and kidnapped.”
There is doubt if Donald Trump’s government will comply with the determination. This is the third time that justice orders an illegally deported immigrant to be reinstated – the most remarkable case is that of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, born in El Salvador, but married to an American and a US -born son. Even with legal permission to live and work on American soil, he was arrested and deported to El Salvador, where he was sent to Cecot, a prison for terrorists with various accusations of human rights violation. There is no clue that opens Garcia committed a crime. Justice has determined that Trump reintegrates the saved, but so far he remains at Cecot.
Trump returned to the presidency in January this year, elected with the discourse of hardening of migratory policy. The US confirmed this week that a group of eight immigrants from countries such as Vietnam, Cuba and Mexico was sent to South Sudan, the country on the edge of a new civil war. After a court decision that the Trump government reintegrates these people, they are waiting for DjIbouti.
