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U.S. immigration law does, under some circumstances, allow people to be sent to countries that are not their own.
A federal judge on Monday tore into the Trump administration over its failure to give fair legal treatment to a group of migrants it planned to send to South Sudan but is holding in Djibouti. U.S.
In a dramatic expansion of US immigration enforcement, the Trump administration is trying to deport a group of migrants—including individuals from Mexico, Cuba, Vietnam, and Laos—to South Sudan, a ...
DHS officials said the eight men were in the U.S. illegally from Cuba, Laos, Mexico, Myanmar, South Sudan and Vietnam, and ...
Recently deported to South Sudan by U.S. immigration officials, Cuban nationals Enrique Arias-Hierro and José Manuel ...
Judge Brian Murphy slammed the Trump administration for spreading confusion over its sudden and chaotic deportations to South ...
It’s the latest rebuke in an escalating clash over Trump’s deportation agenda. Several judges have now accused the ...
The foreign men convicted of crimes who were placed on a deportation flight headed for the chaotic nation of South Sudan were originally ... Despite their criminal records, a federal judge says ...
Judge Brian Murphy previously ruled the Trump administration could not deport people to third countries without giving them a ...
A federal district court judge in Boston ruled on Wednesday that the Trump administration’s attempt to send several ...
The Department of Homeland Security had earlier said eight people on a flight out of the U.S. had been convicted of crimes in ...