Seymour Flops
Diamond Member
"His due process" was not "violated." He appeared before more than one judge, with legal representation and a chance to call witnesses.Yes, you do.
His due process was violated, and whether you disagree is immaterial.
During that due process, he (his abogado) conned a judge into giving him an order of removal that specified anywhere but the country he was a citizen of. ICE at the time was removing illegals, but they moved on from him to people whose lawyers were not so clever.
He got lucky and fell through the cracks.
Then, he was rounded up with a bunch of other people who had an obligation to self-deport, but instead chose to join gangs, traffick humans, and beat their wives. He was deported to his home country, due to a very understandable mistake.
If he comes back, the courts have ruled he will the same due process as anyone else who has already had due process and given an order of removal.
Due process in that case would be immediate deportation.
Much as I would enjoy the liberal tears that would flow from that event, it ain't gonna happen.
The president of El Salvador, a sovreign nation in Latin America, has said that he has no intention of sending this El Salvadoran citizen to the United States.
Why does that not end if for you? Because El Salvador is a country with mainly brown people, so they don't "count?"