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Trump administration’s deportation policy: Trump administrator’s legal claim: Citizens can be deported without due process without probation abroad

In a shocking new legal argument, the Trump administration asserts that it has the right to deport anyone, including U.S. citizens, without due process or return to home, even if it is wrong. The bold claim is revealed in this week’s Supreme Court summary.

Can American citizens be deported without legal rights?

The Trump administration has asked the Supreme Court to grant it powers that there is no due process, whether citizen or not.
The document claims that the court cannot intervene even in the case of illegal deportation. The policy will allow indefinite overseas detention, depriving citizens of their constitutional rights and, according to Slate’s report, prevent them from seeking legal remedies or returning to their homes.

What happens if someone is deported by mistake?

The Trump administration believes that whether it is a citizen or an immigrant, with or without documents, and then forcibly deport them to another country without following proper procedures.

By imprisoning the individual in a foreign country, it further asserts that it can eliminate all its constitutional rights.

Even if they were undoubtedly deported wrongly, it says that once they were imprisoned overseas, the U.S. government has no authority or responsibility to bring them home.
Surprisingly, as cited in a report by Slate, the administration made these claims in a profile of the U.S. Supreme Court filed Monday morning, rather than in a confidential memo designed to stay away from the public eye.
Also read: National anti-Trump demonstrations scheduled for April 19 in all 50 states after the protests; who organizes them here and what you need to know

Is there any way to challenge this policy in court?

John Sauer, a recently appointed lawyer for Donald Trump, publicly pleaded with a judge’s defense to uphold the government’s power to establish black sites in El Salvador, where anyone can be detained without consequences.

Upon arriving there, they face death, torture, hard labor and indefinite detention. But Sauer claims that even if the government admits to putting it incorrectly, the U.S. court lacks the power to authorize it to return.

According to Slate’s report, no one, including natural citizens of the United States, cannot be kidnapped and imprisoned abroad indefinitely.

FAQ

Can the government actually expel U.S. citizens without a hearing?
This is the issue that the Trump administration argues in court, and there is no need for due process and the court cannot order the government to revoke it.

What happens if a person is deported by mistake?
According to the government’s argument, if an individual ends up in a foreign prison, it cannot even reverse the wrong deportation.

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