Government records obtained by the ACLU show immigration authorities used a point system that families and attorneys say unfairly targeted Venezuelan deportees.
Despite an upcoming immigration hearing, the 19-year-old Venezuelan was taken into custody for questioning about his tattoos.
Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia, who was in the U.S. legally, is now in prison in El Salvador, and federal courts have no ...
Lawyers for a small group of Venezuelan men are urging the Supreme Court not to let President Donald Trump resume deportations of alleged Tren de Aragua gang members without due ...
The Trump administration erroneously deported a man it alleges is a gang member in Maryland back to El Salvador as part of ...
The Trump administration is using a point system to decide which Venezuelans should be deported as suspected members of the feared Tren de Aragua gang, according to federal court documents.
Flawed deportation 'checklist' targets Venezuelans using tattoos as one gang identifier. But experts say Tren de Aragua doesn ...
The United States transported another group of alleged gang members to El Salvador, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said ...
The U.N. human rights commission's working group has now said it will appeal to El Salvador to consider the recent ...
The Trump administration said Monday that it has deported 17 more “violent criminals” from the Tren de Aragua and MS-13 gangs ...
On March 28, Trump asked the Supreme Court for permission under the act to resume deporting Venezuelans to El Salvador while ...