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Trump’s Mass Detention Policy Declared Illegal by Federal Judges

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Trump’s Mass Detention Policy Declared Illegal by Federal Judges

 

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The Trump administration’s sweeping new immigration detention policy is facing fierce legal pushback. Since July 8, officials have begun detaining immigrants en masse — even those who have lived in the U.S. for decades, have no criminal record, or have U.S. citizen children. The administration argues that immigration law requires detention for anyone facing deportation, regardless of whether they’ve been in the country “25 minutes or 25 years.”

 

Dozens of federal judges disagree, calling the policy unlawful and a distortion of established law and due process. Immigrants are being arrested at workplaces, during court appearances, or even at routine immigration check-ins, often ending up in overcrowded and unsanitary detention centers. Lawsuits have surged nationwide, with federal courts — traditionally uninvolved in immigration matters — stepping in to block detentions.

 

Cases highlight the policy’s human toll: a Mexican man in the U.S. for 30 years with a son serving in the Air Force; a Brazilian father detained with a newborn at home; and a Salvadoran mother of two U.S. citizens, including a nursing infant. Advocates say the administration’s true aim is to make the process so punishing that immigrants abandon claims for asylum or legal status.

 

Judges continue to strike down the administration’s interpretation, but officials remain defiant, calling mass detention a cornerstone of Trump’s deportation agenda. With lawsuits mounting daily, the clash between the White House and the courts is intensifying — and millions of immigrants may hang in the balance.

 

Key Takeaways:

  • Trump’s July 8 detention policy allows mass arrests of immigrants, regardless of record or U.S. family ties.

  • Federal judges across the country have ruled the policy illegal and unconstitutional.

  • Advocates say the strategy is designed to force immigrants to give up legal claims by making detention unbearable.

 

Read the original report

 

hmmm..... I've been in Thailand for thirty years .    Maybe I'll go down to immigration and

just tell them to leave me alone now . 

 

what do y'all think my chances would be ?    

 

My case would be that I can not stand living in my country of birth ,  too many Americans there !     

9 minutes ago, rumak said:

hmmm..... I've been in Thailand for thirty years .    Maybe I'll go down to immigration and

just tell them to leave me alone now . 

 

what do y'all think my chances would be ?    

 

My case would be that I can not stand living in my country of birth ,  too many Americans there !     

Yeah, go for asylum 🙏

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