资讯

A judge ruled that the Trump administration's deportations of eight men convicted of violent crimes to South Sudan was ...
DHS officials said the eight men were in the U.S. illegally from Cuba, Laos, Mexico, Myanmar, South Sudan and Vietnam, and all had criminal convictions.
Attorneys in the case said in Tuesday’s filings that DHS did not do that when it allegedly removed people to South Sudan. Per one declaration, an ICE official on Monday afternoon emailed an ...
DHS is violating a court order to remove a group of detainees to South Sudan, lawyers told a federal judge on Tuesday. Around one dozen people — including a person with a removal order to ...
It’s the latest rebuke in an escalating clash over Trump’s deportation agenda. Several judges have now accused the ...
EXCLUSIVE: A Biden-appointed federal judge could decide Wednesday that a plane carrying illegal immigrants convicted of serious crimes to South Sudan has to return. The plane carried eight men ...
DHS Officials Hold Press Briefing To Discuss Deportation Flights To South Sudan DHS officials hold a press briefing to discuss migrant deportation flights to South Sudan. Fuel your success with Forbes ...
A Massachusetts federal judge questioned whether deportations of people to countries other than their own violated his prior court order.
28,756 people played the daily Crossword recently. Can you solve it faster than others?28,756 people played the daily Crossword recently. Can you solve it faster than others?
the remedy order states The DHS, the order continues, may choose to conduct the process in South Sudan or return them to the United States. "The Court cautions Defendants that this remedy should ...
Thongxay Nilakout, a citizen of Laos, shot and killed a German tourist in Southern California in 1994 when he was 17. He was convicted of shooting and killing Gisela Pfleger and wounding her husband ...
Migrants allegedly deported to South Sudan committed ‘barbaric’ crimes: DHS official ABC News’ Shannon Kingston reports on the Trump administration’s possible violation of an order barring ...