politicsconservative
Midnight Ruling: The Supreme Court's Swift Action on Venezuelan Deportations
Texas, USASunday, April 20, 2025
The court's order told the administration not to deport Venezuelans in the Bluebonnet Detention Center. Alito believed this was a big and unusual step. He thought the court should have let lower courts decide first. The administration had already asked the high court to reconsider its decision.
Before the Supreme Court stepped in, two federal judges and a circuit court had refused to stop the deportations. The ACLU had sued to block these deportations. They said immigration authorities were accusing Venezuelans of being in a gang. This would make them subject to a old law from 1798. The law has only been used a few times in U. S. history.
The law was last used during World War II to hold Japanese-American civilians. The administration said it gives them the power to quickly remove immigrants they think are in a gang. After the Supreme Court's order, federal judges in other states issued orders to stop removals. But this did not happen in the area covering Bluebonnet, Texas. Some Venezuelans have already been sent to El Salvador and put in a notorious prison there.
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