President Donald Trump said Friday that he “didn’t sign” the Alien Enemies Act invocation, despite the White House saying he had done so. The March 14 invocation, featuring Trump’s signature, is listed as a presidential action on the White House website,
The Trump administration has asked the Supreme Court to lift a District Court judge's order blocking the use of an obscure 18th century law to summarily expel Venezuelan immigrants. Earlier this month,
The Alien Enemies Act of 1798 gives the president wartime powers to deport undocumented immigrants with little to no due process.
It’s not clear exactly when Trump signed the Alien Enemies Act proclamation. The proclamation stated that it was signed on March 14; an ICE officer testified that it was first posted on the White House website at 3:53 p.m. ET on March 15.
Press secretary Karoline Leavitt also slammed U.S. District Judge James Boasberg as a "Democrat activist" after he halted deportation flights to El Salvador.
President Trump on Friday deflected when asked if he signed the order to invoke the Alien Enemies Act, an 18th-century wartime law, to deport Venezuelan migrants allegedly linked to the Tren de
Correction: A graphic at the end of the segment suggested that U.S. citizens of Japanese descent were incarcerated during World War II under the Alien Enemies Act. In fact, the Alien Enemies Act ...
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