Georgia Federal Court Temporarily Blocks Removal Under Alien Enemies Act
COLUMBUS, Ga. — A federal court in Georgia has temporarily blocked the Trump administration from using the Alien Enemies Act to deport a Venezuelan man who is seeking asylum and being held in the Stewart Detention Center in Georgia. The case is Y.A.P.A. v. Trump.
The ruling stems from a lawsuit brought by the American Civil Liberties Union and the American Immigration Council.
The Georgia court is one of many around the country involving ACLU lawsuits to have now blocked the Trump administration from using the Alien Enemies Act to send people to a notorious overseas prison without due process.
The following is reaction to the ruling:
ACLU attorney Daniel Galindo, who argued the case, said: “The president can’t unilaterally declare an invasion of the United States to invoke a wartime authority during peacetime, and send a person off to a brutal El Salvador prison with zero due process. This decision provides important protection against illegal and unconstitutional acts by the government.”
The ruling is online here.
Immigrants' Rights
Y.A.P.A. v. Trump
Immigrants' Rights
Y.A.P.A. v. Trump
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