Trump asks the Supreme Court to neutralize the Convention Against Torture

Trump asks the Supreme Court to neutralize the Convention Against Torture


According to President Donald Trump’s lawyers, the administration can simply wait until after an immigration judge has conducted the proceeding that ordinarily would determine whether a particular noncitizen may be deported to a particular country, and then, if that noncitizen is allowed to be deported, announce that the immigrant will be deported to some previously unmentioned country — even if that immigrant reasonably fears they will be tortured in that nation. D.V.D., the case where the Trump administration asks the justices to neutralize the Convention Against Torture, is unlike some of the more high-profile deportation cases that reached the Supreme Court — such as the unlawful deportation of Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia to El Salvador — in that no one really questions that the immigrants at the heart of this case may be deported somewhere. If a country “has provided diplomatic assurances that aliens removed from the United States will not be persecuted or tortured,” the Trump administration claims it can deport people to that country “without the need for further procedures.” In other cases, it claims that it can give the immigrant such a brief period of time to raise an objection that it would be exceedingly difficult for them to find legal counsel, much less compile enough evidence to show that their fears are justified.

Author: Ian Millhiser


Published at: 2025-06-09 22:37:41

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