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5 snack: behind Trump's deal to deport migrants to El Salvador

The deportation of President Trump in March from more than 200 alleged gang members from Venezuela to a prison from maximum security in El Salvador has emerged as a flashpoint in the application of war powers by the government to award immigrants.

Lawyers for the deportants say that the operation on March 15 avoided the proper procedure and called those who are not gang members. The Supreme Court is now ready to weigh up how the White House tried to apply the extraterrestrial enemy law, which had previously been addressed by the president in war.

A New York Times reporter team checked court files and government documents and government officials and lawyers for deported and their relatives to reconstruct how the United States secured the deal with El Salvador, and confiscated the law to end their deportation efforts.

Here are five snack bars.

President Nayib Bukele von El Salvador campaigned for President Trump and his immigration agenda and celebrated the arrival of the deported from the United States. But behind the scenes, Mr. Bukele commented on who was sent the United States in his new terrorism boundary center, known as Cecot, according to the people known by the New York Times.

During the negotiations, Mr. Bukele told the US officials that he would only take what he described as “convicted criminals” from other countries. He made it clear that he did not want migrants from other nations whose only crimes in the United States were illegal.

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