Judge bars deportation under Alien Enemies Act, says constitutional protections are what make 'America great'
Source: Law & Crime
May 21st, 2025, 7:19 pm
A Georgia judge on Wednesday barred the Trump administration from deporting a Venezuelan immigrant using the Alien Enemies Act (AEA). In a 15-page opinion, U.S. District Judge Clay Land, a George W. Bush appointee, frames the case as part of an ongoing political clash as President Donald Trump moves to reverse the immigration policies of Joe Biden, with courts thrust into the middle of the controversy.
The judge says his work is to decide any given case on the merits of that case alone, and here he finds the governments position lacking. (I)t is difficult sometimes to separate the policy issues from the legal ones in these cases, Lands opinion reads. But the courts job (solemn duty) is to carefully make that discernment and base decisions on a good faith interpretation of the law and not immigration public policy considerations.
In the case, stylized as Y.A.P.A. v. Trump, the plaintiff filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus as a lone litigant in order to preemptively prevent his transfer to a notorious prison in El Salvador known as the Center for Terrorism Confinement (CECOT), the judge explains. The plaintiff alleges the government is likely to try and have him summarily deported under the auspices of the AEA. This claim, the court notes, is based on Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) telling an immigration court the detainee is a known associate of Tren de Aragua (TdA), the transnational Venezuelan gang cited in Trumps invocation of the 18th-century wartime law.
The government, for its part, insisted the plaintiff does not have standing to file his habeas petition because he has not even been designated an alien enemy under the AEA. The judge rejected that argument, based on a series of U.S. Supreme Court rulings about due process required under the obscure statute.
Read more: https://lawandcrime.com/high-profile/unrestrained-zeal-does-not-include-gaming-the-system-judge-bars-deportation-under-alien-enemies-act-says-constitutional-protections-are-what-make-america-great/
Full headline: Unrestrained zeal does not include gaming the system: Judge bars deportation under Alien Enemies Act, says constitutional protections are what make America great
Link to ORDER (PDF viewer) - https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/25950897-yapa-v-trump-order/
Link to ORDER (PDF) - https://s3.documentcloud.org/documents/25950897/yapa-v-trump-order.pdf
I was looking up this judge and found this blast from the past - Judge Clay Land v. Orly Taitz, Part II


riversedge
(75,782 posts)a warning next time---that smirk is so sickening!!
BumRushDaShow
(153,490 posts)have some awful pic of him and I have to quickly scroll away from them.
Talitha
(7,542 posts)SO damned sick of his uglymug!!
riversedge
(75,782 posts)riversedge
(75,782 posts)............The judge then invokes all-but inverting the namesake of Trumps own national movement to further elucidate the point.
The public interest, while not always vocalized the loudest, requires that we remember that these constitutional protections do not exist only for those attending lunch at the local Rotary Club, enjoying war stories at the VFW hall or having a beer at the Moose Club lodge, Land goes on. These rights are not rationed based upon political views, and they do not belong solely to those who may be subjectively determined to be great Americans. They extend to those whom many may consider to be the most repugnant among us. This foundational principle is part of what has made, and will continue to make, America great.
bucolic_frolic
(50,616 posts)I think KO used to call her Orally Taitz ...
BumRushDaShow
(153,490 posts)

