DOJ tells judge accused migrants can have at least 24 hours to contest deportations under AEA
Source: ABC News
April 21, 2025, 2:44 PM
Lawyers for the Justice Department, facing pushback on the Trump administration's efforts to deport alleged migrant gang members under the wartime Alien Enemies Act, told a federal judge in Colorado Monday that they would give such migrants at least 24 hours to file a habeas petition contesting their removal.
The move came during a hearing Monday in which U.S. District Judge Charlotte Sweeney heard arguments over a temporary order she issued barring the administration from removing any noncitizens from Colorado under the 18th century authority that lets noncitizens be removed with little-to-no due process.
Regarding individuals who file for habeas corpus, the DOJ attorney said "the government, at this time, has no intent to remove those individuals pending litigation."
In response, ACLU Colorado Legal Director Tim Macdonald argued that it is "preposterous" to suggest that a 24-hour notice would be enough time to allow people to file a habeas petition. "I guess we should be peppering this court with hundreds of habeas petitions to the extent the government even allows us in the facility to talk to those people," said Macdonald. "That's not the way the rule of law should work."
Read more: https://abcnews.go.com/US/judges-colorado-california-hear-arguments-administrations-deportation-policies/story?id=121013748

bucolic_frolic
(49,927 posts)LetMyPeopleVote
(161,888 posts)The trump DOJ was in the process of deporting a good number of detainees without giving them any real due process. The order from SCOTUS stopped a good number of detainees from being deported.
https://bsky.app/profile/laurenmeidasa.bsky.social/post/3lnaoycj5o225
Link to tweet
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/immigration/legal-fight-raged-ice-buses-filled-venezuelans-heading-airport-turned-rcna202007
At least 28 detainees most, if not all, understood to be Venezuelan nationals were placed on buses Friday evening at ICEs Bluebonnet Detention Center in Anson, Texas, and then driven toward Abilene Airport about 30 miles away.
The motorcade including at least 18 squad cars from various law enforcement agencies with flashing lights along the north Texas highways left the ICE facility, with some men on board being told they were being deported to El Salvador and some told they were headed to Venezuela, according to the wife of one of the detainees and two lawyers representing other detainees at the facility. Prior to their departure, it was not clear what their destinations would be.
The video, obtained exclusively by NBC News, shows the ICE motorcade pass the airports exit and then turn around, looping back to return to the Bluebonnet detention facility.
The Trump administration is seeking to deport the men, who it says are members of the Tren de Aragua gang. It remains unclear whether the government has the authority to apply the Alien Enemies Act to gang members outside of a war situation, and whether adjudications about gang membership are accurate.
The administration has asked the Supreme Court to stop its pause on these would-be deportation flights.
Due process requires more that 24 hours
republianmushroom
(19,546 posts)Ha Ha Ha, more like the dept. of trump.
patphil
(7,705 posts)It takes longer than that to get a lawyer. Does our government think immigrants have lawyers on retainer, with pre-written petitions ready to go?
No, of course not. But it's the callous, empty gesture that counts.
Smells like month old empathy that's been laid out in the Sun to die.
Historic NY
(38,867 posts)how they run the court and hearings. I hope a Judge tells the blonde bimbo to stay in her lane.