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President Donald Trump was banned by the Federal Appeal Court of the use of the Eighteenth Century Law, which is the law of foreign enemies, to deport Venezuelan immigrants that says his administration says to the criminal gang, Trin de Aragoa.
Resolution 2-1 of the American Court of Appeal of the Fifth Chamber was found that there was no “invasion or incursion” by a foreign authority as required under the law of 1798 to justify its protest in the case of this group of immigrants.
Through the executive order, Trump conducted the law of foreign enemies by saying that there is an invasion of the United States by the foreign criminal gangs that his administration has now identified as terrorist groups.
The law of foreign enemies was only used three times before in the history of the United States, all during the declared wars – in the 1812 war and the two world wars.
The Trump administration argued to no avail that the courts could not guess the president’s design that Treen de Aragoa was linked to the Venezuela government and represented a danger to the United States, and exceeded the use of the law.
The decision prohibits deportations from Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi.
In the majority, the American districts of Leslie Southok, George W. Bush, and Irma Carillo Ramirez, were appointed by Joe Biden. Andrew Oldham, appointed Trump, creative.
This is a developing article. Follow -up updates.
This article is used to report by Associated Press.
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