Supreme Court, Trump and Tren de Aragua
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The Supreme Court on Monday threw out a judge's decision to block the removal of men alleged to be members of the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua to El Salvador without any legal process under the Alie...
From NBC News
The US Supreme Court has directed the Trump administration to return a man it erroneously deported to a maximum-security prison in El Salvador, the latest legal blow to the government’s efforts to tur...
From The Financial Times
U.S. stocks are giving back some of their historic gains from the day before as Wall Street weighs a global trade war that has cooled in temperature but is still threatening the economy.
From Houston Chronicle
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A federal immigration official acknowledged last week that the removal of a Maryland man to El Salvador was an "administrative error."
President Donald Trump praised the Supreme Court’s ruling, but a contempt hearing Tuesday could upend the win as Judge James Boasberg presses officials on secretive deportations.
U.S. judges said on Wednesday they would impose new limits on President Donald Trump's attempts to deport alleged Venezuelan gang members under a wartime law, after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down a broad ban on such removals in another court.
Rep. Chip Roy (R-TX) expressed gratitude over the Supreme Court’s ruling that will allow the deportation of illegal immigrants to resume but argued that it is not a win the administration should take “to the bank.
Attorney General Pam Bondi put migrant criminals on notice after the Supreme Court granted a request to lift the stay on deportation flights in a temporary victory for President Trump.
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Coney Barrett, a Trump nominee, took a very careful path in opposing the Supreme Court's conservative majority