Judge blocks immigrants’ deportation to South Sudan one day after Supreme Court clears the way

On Friday, a Federal Judge briefly stopped the deportation of eight immigrants to South Sudan, where the war fell to South Sudan, and sent the case to another judge in Boston on the day after the Supreme Court. Green illuminated their abolition.
Regional Judge Randolph Moss sent the case from Washington to the north after an extraordinary July 4 hearing on Friday afternoon. The best equipped judge to cope with the problems, his decisions, the Trump administration, led to the first time to start the deportation of the East African country, Brian Murphy.
He extended his order of deportation until the eastern hour until 16:30, but it was unclear whether Murphy would move on the federal holiday to further limit the lifting. Moss said that the new claims of immigrants’ lawyers deserve the hearing.
Management is trying to deport immigrants for weeks. None of them is from South Sudan, which is in the civil war and recommends that the US government should not travel before making its own funeral arrangements. The government flew them to the US naval base in Djibouti, but it could not take them further because Murphy decided that it could not be sent to a new country without the chance to take a court hearing.
Supreme Court This decision evacuated Last month, on Thursday night, he published a new order that explains that this means that this means that immigrants can be moved to South Sudan. For immigrants from Laos, Mexico, Myanmar, Vietnam and other countries, lawyers made an urgent request to stop their abolition that night.
The case was appointed to Moss, who briefly prevented the transportation of the immigrants from Djibout to South Sudan. After sending the case to Murphy, he extended this bar a little. The administration said he expected to fly immigrants to South Sudan on Friday.
Temporary accommodation was first reported by Legal Journalist Chris Geidner.



