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For a large part of the past two months, the White House has adopted a challenging position in the direction of a series of judicial orders – including one of the Supreme Court – to take steps to ensure the freedom of Kilmar Armando Garcia, a man from Maryland, wrongly deported to El Salvador in March.

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But the administration also disputes a separate judicial order in another case in which civil servants are told to ask the release of another and less well -known immigrant who was deported to El Salvador on the same series of flights as Mr Abrego Garcia.

That man, a 20-year-old Venezuelan identified in lawsuits as Cristian, was flown to El Salvador on 15 March with dozens of other immigrants. He was one of the nearly 140 Venezuelans deported without hearings after Trump officials accused them of being a member of the Tren de Aragua Street gang and considered them subjected to the proclamation of President Trump who called an 18th-century war law.

Mr. Abrego Garcia, a Salvadoran citizen, was deported to one of those flights, although an earlier judicial order expressly forbade him to be sent back to his home country. Something similar happened to Cristian: he was driven out of the United States, despite a ruling that his removal violated an earlier court scheme, intended to protect young migrants with hanging asylum cases.

Last month Judge Stephanie A. Gallagher, who took the judge in the case of Mr Abrego Garcia, the Trump government to ‘facilitate the return of Cristian by asking the Salvadoran government to send him back to our soil. But on Tuesday Judge Gallagher agreed to put her own order until Thursday to give the Ministry of Justice the time to appeal.

The two cases, both of which play in the federal court in Maryland, illustrate the way in which the White House has sought new and aggressive methods to expel immigrants from the United States. Things also reflect the always recalcitrant attitude that the administration has adopted with regard to judicial orders – especially in deportation cases.

In Her first orderOn April 23, Judge Gallagher said that Cristian should not have been deported because he was protected by the protection of a settlement agreement that immigration lawyers and the Ministry of Interior Security had reached in the decreasing days of the Biden administration.

According to that Agreement, not -counseled minors arrive in the United States and that asylum claims cannot be removed from the country until their affairs are completely resolved.

In the weekend, the Ministry of Justice asked Judge Gallagher to put that order aside and say that if Cristian were sent back to the United States, immigration officers would reject his asylum claim – a movement that would increase the protection of the settlement agreement.

Department lawyers explained that his asylum application would be refused because he was a terrorist. The Department did not disclose what evidence it has to support that claim, apart from the fact that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has designated Aragua as a foreign terrorist organization.

During a hearing on Tuesday, Judge Gallagher refused to reverse her original statement, and noted that even if the government finally intends to reject Cristian’s asylum claim, this should do this in a trial that took place in the American courts.

She told the Ministry of Justice that the government “cannot skip” until the end “and just leave Cristian in El Salvador because it believes it would be useless to bring him back.

Yet judge Gallagher acknowledged that if Trump officials were to return Cristian and denied his asylum application, he might not be able to stay in the United States.

“It may be that the result here for Cristian is not an asylum,” she said. “I think people who have followed the news in the last four months would not be surprised if that is the end result.”

The cases in Maryland are not only the ones in which the Ministry of Justice, on behalf of the White House, fights efforts to bring deported people back to the American soil.

Last month in a case in Massachusetts, the lawyers of the Department tried to convince a federal court that the administration had not violated His order Require that immigrants have the opportunity to challenge their removal to a country, not the HUNDE if they have driven to fear that they will be sent there.

While the lawyers admitted that four Venezuelan men who were accused of being the Aragua members were recently sent to El Salvador from an American military base in Cuba without a chance to question their removal, they gave a limited reason why. The lawyers claimed that the judge’s order only included civil servants of the Department of Homeland Security, and the men were technically sent by officials from the Ministry of Defense from Cuba.

Next week, a federal judge in Louisiana is planning to keep a hearing to determine whether Trump is wrongly officials A 2-year-old American citizen turned off to Honduras with her mother.

The judge, Terry A. Doughty, who was appointed by Mr. Trump, plans to investigate the government’s claim that the mother has asked that the girl – known as VML – is being deported with her. Lawyers for the family said that the mother and father wanted VML to stay in the United States.

In another deportation case, a federal judge has put in Washington A hearing for Wednesday To discuss whether he can order the return of all Venezuelan men who were deported to El Salvador with Cristian under the Alien Enemies Act.

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