‘Lack of lack of any procedure’: Judge Trump orders the administration to help bring back the deported Guatemelle man

A federal judge has directed the Trump administration to provide the withdrawal of a Guatemala person, who was sent to Mexico despite increasing the possibility of harassment there, a step said in the court that probably has been violated due to procedure security.The person identified in the court filing as OCG is gay and was granted protection from the removal of Guatemala as part of an American Immigration Judge’s decision. However, the immigration officials instead sent him to Mexico, where he earlier stated that he was abducted and raped before finishing back to Guatemala. He is currently hidden. In his order issued late Friday night, US District Judge Brian Murphy described the exile “as any kind of deficiency of the fixed process”, as reported by the news agency AP.Murphy said that “no one has ever suggested that OCG pose any kind of security threat,” saying that the government’s action was “wrongly loaded the terror of a man’s bear in a bus and sent it back to a country where he was allegedly raped and kidnapped.”As the new York TimesThe judge also criticized the government for his contradictory statements, earlier claimed that OCG expressed no fear of Mexico, then later admitted that it could not recognize that the officer had received such a statement. Judge Murphy has now ordered the government to investigate how this information was recorded, including dependence on a software system called Enforce Alien Removal Module.The ruling Trump-Eugration adds to the growing list of judicial rebels against the exile. In a similar case, the Al Salvadoran man Kilmar Abrego Garcia was accidentally deported despite a 14 -year residence in Maryland. The Supreme Court ordered his return, although the administration claims that the state is unable to do so citing secrecy and foreign custody.In the case of OCG, Judge Murphy said that, unlike Abrego Garcia, the man is not conducted by any foreign government, causing him to return to him. Murphy wrote, “To facilitate his return will not be expensive, a burden or will disrupt the objectives of the government.”Murphy also condemned the filing of a government, which accidentally revealed the full name of OCG, which increased the risk of its safety. The judge said, “This is a bell that may not be uncontrolled given the permanent nature of the Internet.”In the announcements submitted in court, OCG said that he lives alone in his sister’s house in Guatemala, rarely ventures out, and in “continuous fear”. “I can’t be gay here, which means I cannot be myself,” he said.OCG is one of the several plaintiffs in a class-action case challenging exile without appropriate opportunity to introduce claims of potential harassment in violation of international obligations. The group’s lawyers are also trying to stop the exile of eight other men in South Sudan, where the conditions are unstable. The Trump administration reportedly flew him to an American military base in Djibouti, where he is believed to be held.US State Secretary Marco Rubio acknowledged the use of the US base in Djibouti and warned that the court intervention could stress diplomatic relations with Libya and Djibouti.The White House has rejected the plaintiff as “demons” and labeled Judge Murphy, a biden appointment, a “far-left worker judge”. However, Murphy has continued to claim judicial rights in protecting basic rights, giving orders that the prisoners be allowed to talk with the lawyers. Till Friday evening, his legal lawyer was still not accessible.