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US judge commands Trump Administration, wrongly returning the gay man | Trump Administration

On the late Friday evening, a federal judge ordered the Trump government to facilitate the return of a guatemal man, which, despite his fears to be damaged there, was deported to Mexico and who has now returned to Guatemala.

The gay man who is gay had advertised asylum in the USA last year after he was attacked twice in homophobic acts of violence in Guatemala. He was protected to be returned to his home country to his home country at that time, but the Trump government put him on a bus and instead sent him to Mexico.

The US district judge Brian Murphy found that the deportation of the man probably “had the appearance of a proper procedure”. In a statement to the court, the man who was identified in the legal documents by his initials said he was returned to Guatemala two months ago: “I hid in constant panic and constant fear.

An earlier legal proceedings found that OCG risked the persecution or torture when he had returned to Guatemala, but he also feared to return to Mexico. He presented evidence of raping there and capturing for ransom while looking for asylum in the USA.

“Nobody ever proposed that OCG represents any kind of security threat,” wrote Murphy in his order. “In general, this case shows no special facts or legal circumstances, only the banal horror of a man who was wrongly loaded into a bus and sent back to a country in which he was supposedly only raped and kidnapped.”

Murphy's command contributes to a number of findings by federal courts against the recently published deportations of the Trump management.

Last week Murphy, a bidding representative, found that the Trump government had violated a command that he gave from the government officials to deport people to countries who did not give their own without giving them enough time.

In a hearing, the Homeland Security Department announced that seven immigrants had been deported to a third country on Tuesday, but they refused to say where the men went. It was later known that the men were told that they were sent to South Sudan.

In this case, Murphy said that the government had noticed the seven men a little more than 24 hours that they were removed from the United States, which he described as “simply insufficient” and could lead to a determination of criminal contempt.

Other cases that were excited for quick deportations are those of Kilmar Ábrego García, which was sent to El Salvador. The United States' Supreme Court ordered the government to “relieve” the return of Ábrego García, but the White House said that it was not in its authority.

This case triggered a legal dispute over the practical importance of the Supreme Court of “relieved”.

In his decision, Murphy noticed the dispute over the use of the verb and said that OCG's return to the USA is not so complicated.

“The court found that” relief “should wear less luggage in this context than in several other remarkable cases,” he wrote. “OCG is not kept by any foreign government. The accused have refused to provide an argument that the facilitates of the government hinder the objectives of the government.”

The Associated Press has contributed the reporting

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