The US Supreme Court ordered the Trump Administration to suspend deportation of a group of The accused members of the Venezwell gang.
A civil group for civil liberties resisted the administration because of the planned deportations of Venezuelans detained in northern Texas, in accordance with the 18th century wattime law.
On Saturday, the Supreme Court ordered the government “not to remove any member of the alleged class detained by the United States until a more order of that court.”
Justice Clarence Thomas and Justice Samuel Alito did not agree.
President Donald Trump has relied on the Enemy Enemies Act of 1798, which grants the President of the United States, which encompasses the powers to order the detention and deportation of local residents or citizens of “enemy” nation without following the usual processes.
Trump has accused the Venezuelan band Tren de Aragua (TDA) of “performing, experience and threatening an invasion or predatory invasion” in the United States.
Of the 261 Venezuelans deported as of April 8, to the famous mega prison in El Salvador, 137 were removed under the Law on Enemy Enemy, a senior administration official told CBS News, the US partner of the BBC.
The lower court temporarily blocks these deportations on March 15.
Initially, the Supreme Court ruled on April 8 that Trump could use the Law on Foreign Enemies to deport alleged gang members, but the deportes must have a chance to challenge their removal.
“The notice must be provided within a reasonable time and in such a way that it will allow them to actually seek the relief of Habeas in the right place before such a removal occurs,” Jigis wrote in his decision earlier this month.
The US Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which led to the Saturday, said that Venezuelan men detained in northern Texas had received notifications in English, although they only speak Spanish that they would be deported immediately and were not told that they were entitled to challenge the appointment in Federal.
“Without the intervention of this court, dozens or hundreds of class members proposed can be eliminated on a possible life sentence in El Salvador, without a real opportunity to challenge them to indicate or remove them,” the lawsuit said.