Many of the illegal alien gang members were deported to El Salvador by President Donald Trump via alien enemy law.
Last week, the Trump administration used alien enemy laws to deport 250 illegal alien gang members related to Tren de Aragua (TDA) and MS-13. Both have been designated as terrorist organizations by the State Department.
At the last minute, deportations are reportedly already in place, so federal judge James E. Boasberg issued a temporary restraining order that blocked Trump from using alien enemy laws to deport illegal aliens.
in declaration Immigration Customs Enforcement (ICE) Robert Cerna revealed to the court that many of the gang members of deportation are required for violent crimes in other countries, including murder, rape, assault, inducement, child accuse, possession of illegal firearms, harassment, corruption and drug crimes.
According to Cerna, five of the gang members were eligible for Interpol notifications. Interpol stands for International Criminal Police Agency and is a global international police agency made up of law enforcement agencies from various countries.
Cerna also said that the ICE agents “examined the individual aliens carefully to ensure that the individual aliens were actually members of the TDA.”
Boasberg has since begun investigating Trump's Department of Justice (DOJ) about the timeline for when deportation flights occurred and landed in El Salvador.
Wednesday, Boasburg I said He “want to determine whether the government was intentionally flotted” and the DOJ decides a temporary restraining order on not running flights and “if so, what should the outcome be?”
Since the order, Rep. Brandon Gill (R-TX) has submitted an article on Merge Each against Boasberg, writing in a statement that “the ruling is a fundamental attack on our democratic institutions.”
John Binder is a reporter for Breitbart News. Email him to jbinder@breitbart.com. Follow him on Twitter here.


