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Well, to El Salvador's prison at least.It doesn't matter what his record is. It's still illegal to deport him to another country's prison.
Trump doesn't give a damn about the rule of law. That's easy to see. Great opinion and makes complete sense.That reads almost like the Gettysburg Address -- much more poetic and symbolic than a typical court opinion.
In case you want to read it, Copy of decision is on prior page of this thread.Reuters: APPEALS COURT DENIES JUSTICE DEPARTMENT'S REQUEST TO HALT JUDGE'S ORDER REQUIRING IT TO 'FACILITATE' RETURN OF WRONGLY DEPORTED MAN
Should someone here not legally be deported then?Nobody on this board has ever said they support illegal immigration, you dumb shit.
That's the irony. He could (should) have been deported, legally, to most any country except the one where he's actually a citizen.It doesn't matter what his record is. It's still illegal to deport him to another country's prison.
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US-born citizen being held for ICE under Florida’s new anti-immigration law
Juan Carlos Lopez-Gomez, a 20-year-old U.S. citizen, was being held in the Leon County Jail Thursday, charged with illegally entering Florida as an “unauthorized alien” — even as a supporter waved his U.S. birth certificate in court. The man, who was arrested Wednesday after a traffic stop in...www.rawstory.com
How do you deport someone to a country in which he/she is not a citizen? Most countries only accept the return of citizens. Once you get an order from an immigration court saying you can't deport back to where you are from, it is very close to an actual asylum order.That's the irony. He could (should) have been deported, legally, to most any country except the one where he's actually a citizen.
Also, weren't some of the Iranian dissidents that were detained in Iran and called hostages by successive presidents Iranian citizens.Yes, as a legal matter that is true.
Suppose a person has a green card. When he goes back to his home country, let's say he's arrested, killed and his body cut into pieces with a bone saw. The home country says, "we were just applying our law to our citizen." According to your logic/Trump logic, that's the end of the story -- the US has no interest here, because he's a citizen in the country where his citizenship lies.
Is that how you think the legal system works here?
And think about extradition: when a non-citizen commits a crime on our soil, and then flees back home, can the US extradite him, to try him for his crimes here? The answer is yes. And while the US cannot *compel* that return, the US has every expectation that he will be extradited (per extradition treaties).
Happy to be proven wrong.El Salvador has denied Sen. Van Hollen’s request to see/speak with Kilmar Garcia.
Odds have to be high that this dude is already dead.