WASHINGTON, United States
The United States Supreme Court has cleared the way for President Donald Trump to use a rarely-invoked wartime powers law to rapidly deport alleged gang members - for now.
A lower court had temporarily
blocked the deportation of alleged Venezuelan gang members to El Salvador on 15
March, ruling that the actions under the 1798 Alien Enemies Act needed further
scrutiny.
Trump has alleged that the
migrants were members of the Tren de Aragua gang "conducting irregular
warfare" against the US and could therefore be removed under the Act.
While the administration is
claiming the ruling as a win, the justices mandated that deportees must be
given a chance to challenge their removal.
"The notice must be
afforded within a reasonable time and in such a manner as will allow them to
actually seek habeas relief in the proper venue before such removal
occurs," the justices wrote in the unsigned decision on Monday.
"The only question is
which court will resolve that challenge," they wrote.
Monday's ruling said the
challenge - brought by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) on behalf of
five migrants - was raised improperly in a Washington DC court and not in
Texas, where the migrants are confined.
Conservative Justice Amy Coney
Barrett joined the court's three liberal justices in dissenting with the
majority ruling.
In the dissent, they wrote
that the administration's "conduct in this litigation poses an
extraordinary threat to the rule of law".
Trump called the ruling a
"great day for justice in America".
"The Supreme Court has
upheld the Rule of Law in our Nation by allowing a President, whoever that may
be, to be able to secure our Borders, and protect our families and our Country,
itself," he wrote on Truth Social.
The ACLU also claimed the
ruling as "a huge victory".
"We are disappointed that
we will need to start the court process over again in a different venue but the
critical point is that the Supreme Court said individuals must be given due
process to challenge their removal under the Alien Enemies Act," lead ACLU
attorney Lee Gelernt said in a statement to US media.
At least 137 people have been
deported by the Trump administration under the Alien Enemies Act, a move widely
condemned by rights groups.
The act, last used in World
War Two, grants the US president sweeping powers to order the detention and
deportation of natives or citizens of an "enemy" nation without
following the usual processes.
It was passed as part of a
series of laws in 1798 when the US believed it would enter a war with France.
The Trump administration says
all the deportees are members of the Tren de Aragua gang. The powerful
multi-national crime group, which Trump recently declared a foreign terrorist
organisation, has been accused of sex trafficking, drug smuggling and murders
both at home and in major US cities.
US immigration officials have
said the detainees were "carefully vetted" and verified as gang
members before being flown to El Salvador, under an agreement with that
country.
But many of the deportees do
not have US criminal records, a US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)
official acknowledged in court documents.
Some relatives of the deported
migrants have told our reporter the men have been wrongly swept up in the
immigration crackdown, and that they are innocent.
Several other families have
said they believe that deportees were mistakenly identified as gang members
because of their tattoos.
Monday's decision vacates an
earlier ruling by federal judge James Boasberg, later upheld by a federal
appeals court, which had temporarily blocked the use of the law to carry out
the deportations.
Boasberg had dismissed the
government's response to his order as "woefully insufficient". The
White House had said the judge's order itself was not lawful and was issued
after two flights carrying the men had already left the US.
Rights groups and some legal
experts have called the invocation of the Act unprecedented, arguing it has
only previously been used after the US officially declared a war, which under
the US constitution only Congress can do.
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