you can't answer simple questions
Terrorist!
you can't answer simple questions
Trumplandia has undermined the presumption of regularity for the DOJ before judges
Misleading, lying and defying court orders has consequences
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/po...ct/ar-AA1DMa3OSykes rejected the government’s arguments, reasoning that it would likely violate the pe ioner’s cons utional rights. She wrote that Gutierrez-Contreras’s pe ion “raises the serious question whether his removal under the AEA without notice and an opportunity to challenge the removal is a violation of his rights under the Due Process Clause.”
She also indicated that, given the administration’s recent history, she was not inclined to give the government the benefit of the doubt in the instant case without additional details.
“While Respondents challenge the requirement of fourteen days’ notice as unnecessary given that Pe ioner, and others similarly situated, are solely en led to ‘reasonable notice’ under J.G.G., Respondents fail to articulate specifically what they believe is sufficient to comply with the requirement for ‘reasonable notice’ in their briefing and at the hearing on this Pe ion,” the order states. “This Court cannot, and will not, rely on vague and undefined statements about notice procedures when an individual’s due process rights are implicated. Therefore, the Court holds that Pe ioner’s TRO raises a serious question related to the possible violation of his due process rights if he is removed under the AEA without fourteen days’ notice and an opportunity to challenge the removal.”
where's the justice?
https://www.irishtimes.com/crime-law...ee-her-father/An Irish woman who has been living legally in the United States for decades has been taken into detention by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) after a trip to Ireland to visit her sick father.
Cliona Ward (54), who went to the US in her early teens and is the sole carer for a son with special needs, is in an ICE facility in Tacoma, Washington state, according to the enforcement agency’s website.
Her sister, Orla Holladay, who also lives in the US, said Ward travelled back to Ireland recently with their stepmother to visit their father, who has dementia.
On her return to the US, Ward, who has been living in Santa Cruz, California, for more than 30 years, was questioned about drug possession convictions from more than a decade ago that have reportedly been “expunged” under state but not under federal law.
A holder of a valid green card, Ward was held when she landed at San Francisco International Airport as queries were raised about the past convictions.
She was then released but returned to the airport last Monday to show do entation to officials from US Customs and Border Protection recording how the convictions had been expunged.
However, she was taken into custody, moved to a detention facility outside Seattle, Washington, and, according to reports, is now due before the courts until May 7th next.
Last edited by Winehole23; 04-28-2025 at 06:12 PM.
We're having us a time, eh, Winester?
You lack that House, bub. Once a week on the street corners of a Saturday ain't gonna do it.
It's like a blitzkrieg!
Should have hired an assassin who is a better shot
wish y'all had
The name fits, you whine way too much about a whole lot of nothing WH.
We discussing that sack of potato's, re himself, Robinette Biden and those who were truly behind the wheel to sink the great USA?Misleading, lying and defying court orders has consequences
Trump president, not Biden
Why were you Republicans so bad at killing Trump?
Was she wearing a Celtics cap sideways? I've heard that's evidence of being in a violent gang.
Mo Tkacik is my favorite investigative reporter right now
https://prospect.org/justice/2025-04...housing-gangs/But as frightening as it felt watching teenagers parade guns around her block, the kids didn’t seem like a disciplined force to Shannon Peterson, a longtime ESL teacher and neighbor of Romero’s who had become attracted during Invasion Summer to the cause of deporting Venezuelan gang members. “It was more like racing down the alley with a blunt and a beer in your hand, music blaring and no plates, no fears, no s given,” she told the Prospect with a rueful laugh. “Not something that was super … organized. I think it was more like a franchise model.”
What was, by contrast, extremely well organized and centrally coordinated was the public relations rollout by which Tren de Aragua metamorphosed from an arcane obsession of organized crime buffs into an existential threat to the American way of life. That’s because it was masterminded by a politically connected, $475-an-hour crisis communications firm at the apparent behest of Romero’s landlord.
But not all PR is misinformation and not all lies are devoid of truth. A handful of abandoned and neglected apartment buildings in Aurora had been de facto “occupied” by a legitimately violent and vindictive group of actors, and the peculiar insistence of Aurora’s Democratic councilmembers, its interim police chief, and most emphatically its regional housing advocacy organizations that Venezuelan gangs were simply “not a thing” was politically and substantively unwise. In the short term, the “gaslighting” seems to have offended the gangs’ previously woke neighbors far in excess of the crime itself; in the long term, the underlying crises at the heart of the hysteria were the products of foolish political decisions that had gotten virtually no media attention, much less sober analysis. And those foolish decisions, culminating in the buildup of Venezuelans with no criminal record languishing in CECOT while do ented violent criminals and gang leaders enjoy at least a modi of due process in domestic detention centers, could easily lead to much more foolish ones in the lunacy of the current political moment.
The “invasion” of Aurora was the result of a series of conscious political market interventions: the Trump administration’s decision to vaporize what was left of the Venezuelan economy, the Biden administration’s decision in 2022 to loosen work authorization restrictions under pressure from corporations reeling from “labor shortages,” Denver’s decision to brand itself a “sanctuary city,” Texas’s decision to punish sanctuary cities with hundreds of buses of migrants who can’t legally work, Denver’s decision to quietly outsource the problem of housing new residents to a handful of community activists with no systems of governance or oversight. There is likely more blame to be distributed at this point than there is food and housing, and it makes sense that more Americans than ever feel that it is time to examine the evidence, correct the excesses, close the loopholes, and throw out some of the bums.
But that is not quite what is happening.
Law enforcement officials appear to have had other plans. Of nearly 100 suspected TDA members whose names were either publicized when they were charged with crimes, or released in a do ent dump to America First Legal, an advocacy group founded during the Biden administration by Stephen Miller, not one was on the list of men sent to Bukele’s famous dungeon. The only name the Prospect recognized on the list of 238 was that of Nixon Azuaje Perez, a 20-year-old former resident of an apartment complex owned by Romero’s landlord who was accused of hiding evidence in a gruesome shoot-out last summer, though his mother says he was scapegoated and police never added his name to its public list of “confirmed members” of the gang. During the congressional hearing Romero appeared at, House Judiciary Committee chair Jim Jordan (R-OH) boastedthat three—three!—of the 238 men “on that plane” to El Salvador were known to have traveled through the Denver area, which seemed an alarmingly low number for a state whose capital Romero’s law enforcement sources have assured her is the official “headquarters of TDA in America.”
Perhaps law enforcement officials are keener to continue investigating and prosecuting cases than disappear their information sources, which is understandable. But the fact that 80 percent or more of the men disappeared to El Salvador have no apparent criminal record in any country suggests that Trump’s own law enforcement apparatus saved hardened murderers and human traffickers from the horrors of the gulag and condemned hundreds of innocent beauticians and day laborers to on earth in their place. All for a sadistic PR stunt?
One of the few people on the manifest indicted for any crimes was César Humberto López-Larios, an accused high-level boss in MS-13 arrested last summer at the Houston airport who was allegedly involved in secret negotiations between the gang and Bukele to clamp down on murders and whip votes in exchange for certain financial and territorial concessions. López-Larios’ trial was widely expected to shed light on the details of that secret truce, first revealed in 2020 by the website El Faro, which pieced together the negotiations through hundreds of prison intelligence reports. But last month, the DOJ abruptly dismissed the case, citing “sensitive foreign policy considerations.” (Bukele denies the existence of the truce, and his administration ordered the relevant prisons to delete hard drives corroborating the reports immediately following the publication of El Faro’s report.)
Winehole a big fanboy of foreign gang bangers.. No surprise
Yeah that US citizen MS-13 toddler getting cancer treatment here was one bad hombre
Hi, sunshine.
awwww, look at you...you abortion supporting democrats care about kids now.....LMAO.
Do you care about kids?
Those in MS-13 toddlers, am I right?
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