The US Supreme Court stops the deportation of the Venezuelan migrants under the foreign enemies Act, calls the process of processes | Today news

In an emergency of the late night, US Supreme Court has temporarily blocked Trump’s use of the foreign enemies Act to deport Venezuelan migrants without proper process. The decision, argued by a planned mass deportation, was welcomed by the ACLU, which calls the action a life-saving intervention. In this photo released by Senator of Hollen’s Persian Office, Hollen speaks, right, with Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a Salvadoran citizen who lived in Maryland and deported through the Trump administration in El Salvador, in a hotel restaurant in San Salvador, El Salvador, Thursday, April Intervention, via AP) (AP) (AP) in a scarcer and dramatic late-night intervention, via AP) (AP) (AP) in a scarcer and dramatic late-night intervention, via AP) (AP) (AP) in a scarcer and dramatic late intervention, Via AP) (AP) (AP) (AP) (AP) (AP) (AP) (AP) (AP) (AP) Donald Trump’s use of the age-old alien enemies temporarily stopped to deport Venezuelan migrants without proper process. The decision comes a few hours before a planned mass portation. “The government was instructed not to remove any member of the alleged class of detainees from the United States to further order,” the court said. ACLU: ‘They were in imminent danger’ the American Civil Liberties Union, which led the legal challenge, welcomed the decision as a life -saving measure. “These men were at risk of spending their lives in a heinous foreign prison without ever having the chance to go to court,” said Lee Gelernt, chief advocate for the ACLU. “We are relieved that the Supreme Court did not allow the administration to hit them as others were last month.” Trump’s use of obscure LLW sparks -backlash President Trump called up the foreign enemies Act last month to deport Venezuelan migrants, accusing them of ties with violent gangs such as Tren de Aragua, which has now appointed terrorist organizations by the US government. He justified the summary evictions and the use of the notorious prisons of El Salvador by claiming to be part of a “terrorist” and “foreign criminals” suppression. But critics say the administration is trampling in the Constitution process. A law from another era The foreign enemies Act, which was signed in the Act in 1798, was rarely used in modern history. The most notorious application was during World War II, when it was used to arrest Japanese-American citizens in internment camps. Procurates for civil rights say the current use mirrors that dark period. ‘Administrative error’ One of the most high -profile cases involves Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a resident of Maryland who was deported to El Salvador without charges in what Ice later called an ‘administrative error’. A court ruled that the administration should facilitate its return, but Trump refused to comply. On Friday, the president posted a seemingly doctored image of Abrego Garcia with MS-13 tattooed over his knuckles, and doubled on the allegations that he was a gang member. Cecot: ‘A Helgat’ deported migrants are now being held in the Cecot Terrorism Country Center (Cecot) in El Salvador-a mega prison with capacity for 40,000 prisoners. The prison is described by human rights -observers as inhumane, and forbids visits and houses kept in windowless cells on metal bunk beds without mattresses. First Published: 19 Apr 2025, 22:11 IST