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The Trump administration deports hundreds of criminal gang members from Venezuela despite a judicial order to stop distances

The Trump government handed over hundreds of immigrants to El Salvador, although the temporary arrangement of a federal judge increased the deportations as part of a declaration of war from the 18th century to Venezuelan gang members, although flights are usually in the air in the air in the air at the time of the decision.

The US district judge James E. Boasberg issued a decision on Saturday that blocked the deportations, but the lawyers told him that there were already two planes with immigrants in the air – one drove to El Salvador, the other for Honduras. Boasberg verbally ordered that the aircraft would be turned over, but they were not apparently not and he did not include the directive in his written order.

“Upsie … too late,” said Salvadora President Nayib Bukele, an ally of Trump, who agreed to accommodate around 300 immigrants for a year at a price of 6 million US dollars in his country's prisons, wrote on the social media website X about an article about Boasberg's decision. This post was recirculated by the WeiรŸen House Communication Director, Steven Cheung.

Foreign Minister Marco Rubio, who negotiated an earlier contract with Bukele with immigrants, hired on the construction site: “We sent over 250 foreign members of Tren de Aragua, which El Salvador agreed at a fair prize that our taxpayers also held in their very good prisons.”

Steve Vladeck, professor at Georgetown University Law Center, said that the verbal guideline of Boasberg to turn the aircraft over was technically not part of its final order, but that the Trump government clearly violated the “spirit”.

“This only designs future dishes to be hyper -specific in their orders and not give the government scope,” said Vladeck.

According to Trump's explanation of the extraterrestrial enemy law, the immigrants were deported from 1798, which was only used three times in US history.

The law, which called itself during the First World War I and II and in the war of 1812, demands from a president that the United States are in the war and gives him extraordinary powers to hold or remove foreigners who would otherwise have protection after immigration or criminal law. It was last used to justify the detention of Japanese-American civilians during the Second World War.

The ACLU, which submitted the lawsuit, led the reluctant shifts to Boasberg's temporary shifts in deportations, said the government asked the government whether El Salvador's removals were voted against the court.

“This morning we asked the government to assure the court that his order was not violated and waited to listen and try to carry out our own investigations,” said the main attorney of ACLU, Lee learned, in a statement on Sunday.

A spokesman for the Ministry of Justice referred to an earlier declaration by the Attorney General Pam Bondi, who blew up Boasberg's decision, and did not immediately answer whether the government ignored the order of the court.

In a statement on Sunday, Venezuela's government rejected the use of Trump's declaration of law and characterized it as “the darkest episodes in the history of mankind, from slavery to the horror of the Nazis concentration camp”.

Tren de Aragua came from a famous lawless prison in the central state of Aragua and accompanied an exodus of millions of Venezuelans, with the vast majority searching for better living conditions after its country's economy has been lost in the past decade. Trump confiscated the gang during his campaign to paint misleading pictures of communities, of which he claimed that they were “adopted” by a handful of law crusher.

The Trump administration has not deported the immigrants, there have been evidence that they are actually members of Tren de Aragua or in whom they committed crimes in the USA. It also sent two top members of the Salvadoranian MS-13 gang to El Salvador, who had been arrested in the United States.

Video, which was published by El Salvador's government on Sunday, showed men who left planes to an airport package, which was held in turmoil by civil servants. The men who captivated with their hands and ankles tried to run as the officials push their heads down to bend them in the waist.

The video also showed that the men were brought to prison in large bus traffic, which was guarded by police and military vehicles and at least one helicopter. The men were kneeling on the floor when their heads were shaved before they were placed in the purely white uniform of the prison throat length, T-shirt, socks and rubber clogs and in cells.

The immigrants were brought to the notorious Cecot facility, the heart of Bukeles urged to satisfy its once violent country by difficult police measures and limits for fundamental rights

The Trump government said the President actually signed the proclamation that claims that Tren de Aragua had entered the United States on Friday evening, but only announced it on Saturday afternoon. Immigration lawyers said that on Friday they noticed the Venezuelans who could not otherwise be deported according to the Immigration Act to be moved to Texas to deportation flights. They began to submit complaints to stop the transfers.

“Basically, every Venezuelan citizen in the United States can be removed under the pretext of belonging to Tren de Aragua without the chance of defense,” warned Adam Isacson from the office in Washington for Latin America, a human rights group, ahead of X.

The legal dispute, which led to the deportation statement, was submitted on behalf of five Venezuelans held in Texas, of which the lawyers stated that they would be wrongly accused of being members of the gang. As soon as the crime has been called, she warned that Trump could simply explain a Tren de Aragua member to someone and remove it from the country.

Boasberg banned the deportations of the Venezolans on Saturday morning, when the lawsuit was submitted, she only spent all people in federal custody who could be dependent on the afternoon after his hearing. He noted that the law has never been used outside of a war in the congress and that the plaintiffs could successfully argue that Trump exceeded his legal authority to call it up.

The deportation of the deportations is up to 14 days and the immigrants remain in federal custody during this time. Boasberg planned a hearing on Friday to hear additional arguments in the case.

He said he had to act because the immigrants, whose deportations could actually violate the constitution, deserve a chance to hear their requests in court.

“As soon as they are outside the country,” said Boasberg, “I could do little.”