Guatemalans are deported to Mexico, flying to us after judge's order | Trump administration

A Guatemalan man said he was deported to Mexico despite fears he would be persecuted and sent back to the United States on Wednesday after a judge ordered his lawyer to facilitate his return.

U.S. District Court Judge Brian Murphy in Boston, Massachusetts informed him at the U.S. Department of Justice that the man had made it clear that he was not afraid of being sent to Mexico was based on false information.

In a court order last month, Murphy found that the deportation of the man, who was identified only as an OCG in the legal file, could be "possibly "lack of any appearance of proper procedures."

OCG's attorney Trina Realmuto told the guardian Wednesday night shortly after the man landed in Los Angeles: Opportunity to make a claim based on fear. ”

In a court order last month, Murphy found that the deportation of the man, who was identified only as an OCG in the legal file, could be "possibly "lack of any appearance of proper procedures."

"No one suggested that OCG poses any security threat," Murphy wrote, "in general, the situation raised no special facts or legal circumstances, with only the mediocre horror of a country where he was allegedly raped and kidnapped. ”

Murphy continued: “In the oral debate, the defendant’s attorney confirmed that, ‘U.S. policy shall not expel, extradite or otherwise affect the involuntary return of any person to a country where there is substantial basis for believing that the person will believe that the person will be at risk of torture… It will certainly cost the return of the OCG, allowing us to pay a certain cost to enable us to claim that we are able to claim that we are ideal in order to claim that our cost is ideal.

According to the court's declaration, the OCG, who returned to Guatemala after expelling from Mexico two months ago, said: "I have been living in hiding with constant panic and constant fear."

The OCG of gay people applied for asylum last year after several homophobic behaviors in Guatemala.

"I'm not anywhere I've left behind before, because this story is the same as here: gay people like me are just targeting our identities. It's causing constant fear and panic."

Donald Trump's administration said in a May 28 court filing after Murphy's court order that federal immigration officials are working to "bring the OCG back to the U.S. to fixed-operate flight back to the U.S.".

Last month, Trump officials admitted to falsely claiming that OCG is not afraid of being returned to Mexico.

"After further investigation, the defendant was unable to determine any officials asking whether the OCG was concerned about returning to Mexico. The defendant was also unable to confirm that the OCG stated that he told (he) he was being deported to Mexico," the government lawyer said in the court documents.

The guardian has contacted the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) for comment.

Meanwhile, another federal judge ruled Wednesday that the Trump administration must send more than 100 immigrants to El Salvador’s infamous prison, an opportunity to challenge its deportation.

U.S. Regional Chief Justice James Boasberg said in Washington, D.C. that people who were sent to prison in March could not formally compete for demotion or accused them of being members of Gangten de Aragua, Venezuela. He ordered the government to work hard to give them the way to challenge these challenges.

The judge wrote that “significant evidence” surfaced, suggesting that many of the immigrants imprisoned in El Salvador had nothing to do with the gang and thus fell into vulnerable, even rash charges in foreign prisons”.

Boasberg gave the government a week to propose a way that even if they were formally detained in El Salvador, in a month-long legal legend, even if they were formally detained in El Salvador, even if they were formally detained in El Salvador.

Reuters and AP contributed reports