A federal judge blocked on Friday Efforts of a trump administration To expand the fast-track exile across the US under a process known as a rapid removal, it shows that the authorities are trampling the proper process of migrants through the expansion of the policy.
While this will be almost certainly appealed, Friday order The Trump administration has a major setback for large-scale exile efforts, including a campaign to arrest refugees in the immigration courtyard across the US-an operation that depends on the expansion of early removal.
The decision of the US District Judge Jia Cobb stopped the January 1 directive, which expanded the fast removal policy – limited to long -term border areas and recent arrival – anywhere in the country and for those who had come in the last two years.
Early removal allows federal immigration officers to exist quickly, without allowing them to see an immigration judge, until they claim asylum and pass an interview with an American refugee officer. President Trump took over for the second time, the fast-track exile was implemented only for unauthorized migrants who were arrested within 100 miles of an international border and who were in the US for less than two weeks.
Kob said that pro -immigrant advocates said that the legitimacy of nationwide expansion to rapid removal was challenged, who performed “strong demonstrations” that the attempts “violates the fixed process rights of those who affect it.”
Cobb wrote in his opinion, “In such a grip, the court has not doubted the constitutionality of the law of quick removal, nor on its long application at the border,” Cob has written in his opinion. “It only assumes that the government would have to bear the cost of appropriate process for a huge group of people living in the interior of the country, which were not subject to early removal.
Cobb ended indefinitely, and postponed the January expansion of the guidance issued to implement it.
Representatives of the Homeland Security Department did not immediately respond to the request of remarks on Friday’s order.