Rep. Jamie Ruskin (D-MD), a ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee, says hundreds of illegal aliens should have been “righted” to deny that they were linked to Tren Aragua or the MS-13 gang before they were deported from the United States by President Donald Trump's administration.
As reported by the Breitbart News, Trump has called for the alien enemy laws and began deporting hundreds of illegal alien gang members at Tren de Aragua and the MS-13 Gangs.
Two deportations are underway, heading to the mega prison in El Salvador, where two left-wing groups sued, and Justice James Boasburg issued Temporary Restraint Order – Stop Trump from preventing alien enemies from deporting more gang members.
On Wednesday, the appeals court upheld Boasberg's ability to block Trump from gang members to oust Trump under the alien enemy law.
Now Ruskin is It's strictly demanding The Trump administration will hand over details about deportation flights to El Salvador, even if Attorney General (AG) Pam Bondy says he is protected under the state's secret privileges.
According to Raskin, illegal aliens should have been allowed to protect themselves from immigration and customs enforcement (ICE) claims that they were gang members.
I request an answer on the use of the alien enemy law (AEA or conduct) regime, and I request that non-citizens from within the United States be forced to be removed from dangerous prisons in El Salvador. The idea that the US president can simply declare that the US is being invaded by criminal gangs rather than foreign countries, and that it is shocking to ship people to yet another country and hand them over to foreign dictators. What's more, it's scary to think of these people as being held indefinitely in an authoritarian mega prison. In America, they don't have the opportunity to appear before a judge, hear evidence against them, confirm that they are in the case of wrong identity, and challenge substantial claims against them. This is a due process cafcask violation that violates all the basic principles of the American judicial system. [Emphasis added]
…
The families and lawyers of the deported man spoke on their behalf to refute the government's gang membership claims. Under our immigration law, These non-citizens should have been given the right to present these personal rebuttals in the immigration court, but the administration stole the opportunity from them by immediately removing them in El Salvador– In a country where they have no bonds, there is no similarity in the American due process. [Emphasis added]
Ruskin is seeking information such as the names of illegal aliens deported to the El Salvador Mega prison, the number of illegal aliens on each flight, and whether asylum applications are pending in the US.
“This terrifying regime not only affects non-citizens, it affects us all,” Ruskin writes. “Because there is no clear requirement for evidence of crime, gang affiliation or legal status, legal status that prevents people from deporting people under AIE, there is nothing to protect innocent people, including US citizens, from being caught up in these withdrawals if they are allowed to remove them.”
John Binder is a reporter for Breitbart News. Email him to jbinder@breitbart.com. Follow him on Twitter here.
