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President Donald Trump releases the alien enemy law to explain the invasion by gangs and accelerate the deportations. Judge gets up hours later

Washington – On Saturday, a federal judge excluded President Donald Trump's administration of deportations according to a 18th century law that Trump called only a few hours earlier, in which the United States had entered from a Venezuelan gang and that he had new powers to remove its members from the country.

The video in the above player comes from an earlier report.

James E. Boasberg, the top judge of the US district court for the District of Columbia, said that he had to issue his arrangement immediately, since the government already had migrants flying that they claimed to be rejected after Trump's proclamation to El Salvador and Honduras. This week El Salvador already agreed to take up to 300 migrants, which the Trump government described as gang members.

“I don't think I can and have to act longer,” said Boasberg during a hearing on Saturday evening in a lawsuit presented by the ACLU and democracy. “A brief delay in its removal does not cause damage to the government,” he added, finding that they remain in the custody of government, but order that aircraft are overturned in the air.

The decision was made after Trump claimed that the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua entered the United States and called the alien enemy law of 1798 to increase a comprehensive war authority that enables the president to increase a broader scope and executive measures to accelerate the mass deportations.

The law was only used three times in US history, everything during the war. The most recent application was during the Second World War when it was used to detention Germans and Italians as well as for the mass internment of the Japanese-American civilians.

In a proclamation that was published a little more than an hour before Boasberg's hearing, Trump claimed that Tren de Aragua was effectively in war with the United States.

“Over the years, the national and local authorities of the Venezuelan authorities have repeatedly held control of their areas to transnational criminal organizations, including TDA,” says Trump's explanation. “The result is a hybrid criminal state that committed an invasion of the incident in the United States and is a significant danger for the United States.”

The order could have the administration deported to any migrant that it identifies as a member of the gang without going through regular immigration procedures, and could also remove other protective measures under criminal law for people who aimed at the government.

The Tren de Aragua gang comes from a prison in the South American country and accompanied an exodus of millions of Venezuelans, the vast majority of which searched for better living conditions after the economy of its country had reversed in the past decade. Trump and his allies have come to the fore the gang of the alleged threat to immigrants who are illegally and officially equipped in the United States as “foreign terrorist organization” last month.

The authorities in several countries have reported arrests from the members of Tren de Aragua, even when the government in Venezuela claimed to have eliminated the criminal organization.

The government said Trump actually signed the command on Friday evening. Immigration lawyers found that the federal government suddenly switched to Venezuelans, which they would otherwise not have the legal right to get out of the country, and tried to submit complaints to block what they considered a pending proclamation.

On Saturday at 9:20 a.m., Boasberg gave a first command to deport the Trump administration by deporting five Venezuelans, which were referred to as plaintiffs in the ACLU lawsuit and arrested by the government, and believed that they would be deported shortly before deporting. The Trump administration made a calling against this command and claimed that stopping a Presidential Act, before it was announced, the executive paralyzed.

If the arrangement was allowed, “the district courts would have a license to practically determine an urgent lawsuit of national security, only after receiving a complaint,” the Ministry of Justice wrote in his appointment.

Boasberg then planned the hearing in the afternoon whether he should extend his order to all people who could be attacked according to Trump's explanation.

The deputy deputy lawyer Drew Ensign claimed that the president had a broad latitude to identify the threats to the country and to act according to the law of 1798. He found that the Supreme Court of the United States continued to hold a German citizen in 1948 in 1948, three years after the end of the Second World War.

“This would go into the President's privilege very deeply,” said Fähnrich about an injunction.

Lee learned from ACLU, however, found that the law was only called three times and claimed that Trump had no authority to use it against a criminal gang instead of a recognized state. Boasberg said this precedent in the question was difficult, but the ACLU had a reasonable chance of success with these arguments, and so the order was earned.

Boasberg stopped the deportations for those who were in custody up to 14 days and planned a hearing on Friday in the case.

The flood of legal disputes shows the importance of Trump's explanation, the recent step of the administration to expand the presidential power. Fähnrich argued that the congress, as part of his response to the attack on September 11, 2001, gave the authority to delegate “transnational” organizations at the level of the recognized states. And learned that the Trump government could simply issue a new proclamation to use the extraterrestrial enemy law against another migrant gang like MS-13 that has long been one of Trump's most popular destinations.

The author of Associated Press, Regina Garcia Cano in Caracas, Venezuela, contributed to this report.

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