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Court rules Rümeysa Öztürk be transferred to Vermont, denying Trump administration’s appeal (1 Viewer)

CaughtInThe

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There seems to be a trend in our courts where the Trump administration keeps losing cases where they just grab people and do whatever without due process, etc, etc.



"A federal appeals court on Wednesday morning ordered the Trump administration to comply with a lower court order to transfer Tufts PhD student Rümeysa Öztürk from ICE detention in Louisiana to Vermont.

The ruling comes a day after a three-judge panel for the 2nd Circuit for the U.S. Court of Appeals heard arguments over the administration’s request to pause Vermont District Court Judge William Session’s order to move Öztürk ahead of a Vermont court appearance in the case about her detention.

The panel, comprised of Judges Alison J. Nathan, Susan L. Carney and Judge Barrington D. Parker Jr., said the government failed to show it would succeed on the “merits of its appeal.”



 
“Rümeysa has suffered six weeks in crowded confinement without adequate access to medical care and in conditions that doctors say risk exacerbating her asthma attacks. Her detention — over an op-ed she co-authored in her student newspaper — is as cruel as it is unconstitutional,” said Jessie Rossman, legal director, ACLU of Massachusetts."
 
There seems to be a trend in our courts where the Trump administration keeps losing cases where they just grab people and do whatever without due process, etc, etc.


In the United States, an immigration judge can rule that an illegal immigrant can be deported, but there are also cases where expedited removal procedures allow officers to order deportation without a judge. In most cases, a deportation order is issued by an immigration judge in an immigration court proceeding. However, officers at the border or within the U.S. can also issue removal orders through expedited removal, particularly for those who have been in the country for less than two years and lack a lawful status or protection claim.

Elaboration:
  • Immigration Judges:
    .Opens in new tab
    Immigration judges, part of the Department of Justice, preside over immigration court hearings where a person's removability (or deportability) is determined.

 
 
There seems to be a trend in our courts where the Trump administration keeps losing cases where they just grab people and do whatever without due process, etc, etc.



"A federal appeals court on Wednesday morning ordered the Trump administration to comply with a lower court order to transfer Tufts PhD student Rümeysa Öztürk from ICE detention in Louisiana to Vermont.

The ruling comes a day after a three-judge panel for the 2nd Circuit for the U.S. Court of Appeals heard arguments over the administration’s request to pause Vermont District Court Judge William Session’s order to move Öztürk ahead of a Vermont court appearance in the case about her detention.

The panel, comprised of Judges Alison J. Nathan, Susan L. Carney and Judge Barrington D. Parker Jr., said the government failed to show it would succeed on the “merits of its appeal.”



Huzzah!
 
In the United States, an immigration judge can rule that an illegal immigrant can be deported, but there are also cases where expedited removal procedures allow officers to order deportation without a judge. In most cases, a deportation order is issued by an immigration judge in an immigration court proceeding. However, officers at the border or within the U.S. can also issue removal orders through expedited removal, particularly for those who have been in the country for less than two years and lack a lawful status or protection claim.

Elaboration:
  • Immigration Judges:
    .Opens in new tab
    Immigration judges, part of the Department of Justice, preside over immigration court hearings where a person's removability (or deportability) is determined.

by all means, go there and present your legal arguments as to why these courts are wrong.
 
In the United States, an immigration judge can rule that an illegal immigrant can be deported, but there are also cases where expedited removal procedures allow officers to order deportation without a judge. In most cases, a deportation order is issued by an immigration judge in an immigration court proceeding. However, officers at the border or within the U.S. can also issue removal orders through expedited removal, particularly for those who have been in the country for less than two years and lack a lawful status or protection claim.
Thanks for the cut and paste, but what does that have to do with this case?
 

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