Something must be done to make amends.

So you have ZERO adherence to legal procedures when they come into the country, but you want to make up legal procedures to get them out.
There are legal procedures for deportation and due process rights the regime did not adhere to. Nothing needs to be made up. The laws are on the books.
 
There are legal procedures for deportation and due process rights the regime did not adhere to. Nothing needs to be made up. The laws are on the books.
No requirement to give illegals a court date, Simp.

None.
 
Apparently, liberals are alone these days in prioritizing adherence to legal procedures for deportation and due process rights.
Anything to keep child sex traffickers up and running, right? You loons are sick. There is nothing regarding legality when it comes to being here illegally. One is or isn't. Due process was granted with their deportation order. As it was for your hero wife beater and trafficker.
 
There are legal procedures for deportation and due process rights the regime did not adhere to. Nothing needs to be made up. The laws are on the books.
They all had due process and they are all going going gone. Today or tomorrow they are outta here. The next plan is to starve them to self deport. No work no housing no healthcare. Good bye
 
There are legal procedures for deportation and due process rights the regime did not adhere to. Nothing needs to be made up. The laws are on the books.
No kidding, just as there are LAWS regarding coming into the country...simp.
 
This is not being treated justly.

The bitter irony is that the absence of a final order of removal means Abrego Garcia’s wrongful deportation to El Salvador in March was doubly unlawful. We already knew that it was in violation of an immigration judge order that he not be removed to El Salvador specifically, but it now appears likely there was no legal basis to remove him anywhere at all.

He couldn't be deported to his home country, because his gang and a gang in his home country didn't get along.

Sounds like the perfect candidate for immediate deportation to Uganda.
 
There are legal procedures for deportation and due process rights the regime did not adhere to. Nothing needs to be made up. The laws are on the books.

Illegal aliens deserve due process.

"Did you enter the country illegally?"

"Yes."

"Time to go home."
 
This is not being treated justly.

The bitter irony is that the absence of a final order of removal means Abrego Garcia’s wrongful deportation to El Salvador in March was doubly unlawful. We already knew that it was in violation of an immigration judge order that he not be removed to El Salvador specifically, but it now appears likely there was no legal basis to remove him anywhere at all.
He entered the country illegally. That is the basis for removal. All that is happening is stalling that inevitible event.
 
He entered the country illegally. That is the basis for removal. All that is happening is stalling that inevitible event.
His treatment by the regime was illegal despite there being legal ways to deport him.
 
Absolute travesty… he should have “accidentally” died a long time ago, along with every judge who has gotten in the government’s way of getting him (and his family) out of this country, permanemtly
 
The Never-Ending Abrego Garcia Saga

The Trump administration spent another day in court stonewalling U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis of Maryland, defying her explicit order to put on a government witness who could testify with direct knowledge of its efforts to deport the much-abused Kilmar Abrego Garcia to a third country. I was at the courthouse and wrote a full report on that aspect of the hearing.

Separately, on the merits of the case, the Trump administration seems increasingly hobbled by its inability to produce any evidence that a final order of removal was ever issued for Abrego Garcia. Xinis has all but concluded that a final order of removal simply never existed, and her pending decision may well turn on that omission, as Politico’s Josh Gerstein reports.

The bitter irony is that the absence of a final order of removal means Abrego Garcia’s wrongful deportation to El Salvador in March was doubly unlawful. We already knew that it was in violation of an immigration judge order that he not be removed to El Salvador specifically, but it now appears likely there was no legal basis to remove him anywhere at all.


Sadly, this is only one example of the regime's lawless behavior.

Even though I understand Obama's rationale for not pursuing charges against members of Shrub's admin for the torture of detainees, I thought it was a mistake not to. This time around the country can't afford to turn a blind eye to what Pam Bondi has facilitated. Some kind of reckoning is called for even if it is only to make provisions so abuses of law by the DoJ have a more immediate method of recourse.

This was written after trump 1.0. trump 2.0 is much worse.

Repairing the Rule of Law: An Agenda for Post-Trump Reform​

As the U.S. begins to see the light at the end of the Trumpian tunnel, it is time to begin thinking about the issue of repair. One should not assume the result of the election, but it is nonetheless worth asking the question: What should be done in a post-Trump world to restore the rule of law?

Of Trump’s many excesses, his assault on legal norms has to rank high in terms of damage to fundamental values that form the fabric of America. His attacks on the free press, the independent judiciary and the independence of the Department of Justice have all created significant damage. His abuse of executive discretionary authority has made a mockery of the concept of checks and balances. His gaming of the judicial system has revealed weaknesses in our legal process. His attempts to place himself (and his family and his business interests) above the law have called into question foundational national conceptions of equal justice. In short, President Trump has led a wrecking crew (aided and abetted by William Barr and Mitch McConnell) that has severely damaged American legal norms of behavior.

Trump’s attacks on foundational norms and principles leave policymakers with two choices. Lawmakers and voters can accept that damage and admit the inevitability of American decline, or they can fight to restore and strengthen the country’s legal guardrails. This post is an effort to begin that fight—to identify practical steps that the country can take to reinvigorate the rule of law and the concept of checks and balances.

Garcia is an illegal alien and should be returned to his country of origin

Anything less is partisan lib obstruction
 
Garcia is an illegal alien and should be returned to his country of origin

Anything less is partisan lib obstruction
BALTIMORE -- Kilmar Abrego Garcia, whose mistaken deportation helped galvanize opposition to President Donald Trump’s immigration policies, was released from immigration detention on Thursday, and a judge has temporarily blocked any further efforts to detain him.

Abrego Garcia currently can’t be deported to his home country of El Salvador thanks to a 2019 immigration court order that found he had a “well founded fear” of danger there. However, the Trump administration has said he cannot stay in the U.S. Over the past few months, government officials have said they would deport him to Uganda, Eswatini, Ghana and, most recently, Liberia.

Abrego Garcia is fighting his deportation in federal court in Maryland, where his attorneys claim the administration is manipulating the immigration system to punish him for successfully challenging his earlier deportation.


GFY.
 
BALTIMORE -- Kilmar Abrego Garcia, whose mistaken deportation helped galvanize opposition to President Donald Trump’s immigration policies, was released from immigration detention on Thursday, and a judge has temporarily blocked any further efforts to detain him.

Abrego Garcia currently can’t be deported to his home country of El Salvador thanks to a 2019 immigration court order that found he had a “well founded fear” of danger there. However, the Trump administration has said he cannot stay in the U.S. Over the past few months, government officials have said they would deport him to Uganda, Eswatini, Ghana and, most recently, Liberia.

Abrego Garcia is fighting his deportation in federal court in Maryland, where his attorneys claim the administration is manipulating the immigration system to punish him for successfully challenging his earlier deportation.


GFY.
Garcia is an illegal alien

If he does not want to return to his own country thats his problem

America has the moral and legal right to take him anywhere we choose
 
Garcia is an illegal alien

If he does not want to return to his own country thats his problem

America has the moral and legal right to take him anywhere we choose
You are factually incorrect, as always.

Abrego Garcia currently can’t be deported to his home country of El Salvador thanks to a 2019 immigration court order that found he had a “well founded fear” of danger there.
 
15th post
You are factually incorrect, as always.

Abrego Garcia currently can’t be deported to his home country of El Salvador thanks to a 2019 immigration court order that found he had a “well founded fear” of danger there.
Immigration “judges” are not true black robes in the same vein as the rogue district court federal judges

The immigration clerks can be fired and it surprises me that trumps has not replaced them all already

But so far its been reported that he’s replaced about 100

The open borders/mass unvetted migration crowd is trading a little short-term obstruction of trump immigration policy by serving the interests of a gang-banging illegal alien for a much longer term loss

Trust me, its coming
 

Justice Dept. Leaders Pushed to Charge Abrego Garcia, Emails Show​

Federal prosecutors in Nashville have insisted in the past few months that senior Justice Department officials had no involvement in their decision to file charges against Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia, the immigrant who was wrongfully deported to El Salvador in March and then brought back to the United States to face indictment.

But on Tuesday, excerpts from several emails released by a federal judge overseeing Mr. Abrego Garcia’s criminal case appeared to directly contradict those assertions, suggesting that Justice Department leaders — including Todd Blanche, the deputy attorney general — played a greater role in bringing the charges than prosecutors have acknowledged so far.


The drip, drip of DoJ malfeasance keeps coming to light.
 
Garcia is an illegal gang banger who was caught traffiking other gang members in a car he did not own without a driver's license. You want to protect criminals.
 
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