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B.See

(9,029 posts)
Mon Jun 15, 2026, 12:55 AM Monday

Despite Court Protection Orders, Trump Admin Deports Refugees to War-Torn Central Africa, Putting 'Lives at Risk'

Despite Court Protection Orders, Trump Admin Deports Refugees to War-Torn Central African Republic, Putting ‘Lives at Risk’ - Common Dreams “It’s hard to fathom how deeply evil this is,” said Sen. Chris Murphy.

Well, no for these bstrds, actually it isn't.

The US government advises Americans not to travel to the Central African Republic “for any reason.” But it just deported nearly two dozen people to the war-torn country, including several refugees who fled persecution in other nations.

On Friday morning, Human Rights First’s deportation flight tracker reported that a plane used by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) had landed in Accra, Ghana, after departing from Louisiana the previous day and was believed to be en route to the CAR’s capital, Bangui.

According to their lawyers, several of the migrants had received court orders from judges prohibiting their deportation to their home countries, citing the risk of persecution there.

A lawyer for one of the Iranian women told the Times that neither of them has a criminal record and that they both have been granted court protection due to fear of threats to their freedom or lives if they returned to Iran. One is a Christian convert, and the other is a pro-democracy activist.

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Despite Court Protection Orders, Trump Admin Deports Refugees to War-Torn Central Africa, Putting 'Lives at Risk' (Original Post) B.See Monday OP
If this is the result canetoad Monday #1
Certainly wouldn't be his first.. B.See Monday #2
And everyone who participated dickthegrouch Monday #3
The system has a severe weakness when it comes to enforcement malaise Monday #4
K&R spanone Monday #5
Even if the region wasn't war thorn, LisaL Monday #6
They aren't supposed to. That's the point. B.See Monday #7

canetoad

(21,155 posts)
1. If this is the result
Mon Jun 15, 2026, 01:04 AM
Monday

Of an executive order, he should be charged with murder if anyone dies.

dickthegrouch

(4,722 posts)
3. And everyone who participated
Mon Jun 15, 2026, 07:35 PM
Monday

Should be tried as accessories to that murder. From drivers, to food service, to pilots, to guards, to the attorneys enabling it all.

malaise

(299,197 posts)
4. The system has a severe weakness when it comes to enforcement
Mon Jun 15, 2026, 07:40 PM
Monday

Given the number of laws violated since Jan 2025, Donvict and his goons should have been locked up by now.

LisaL

(47,942 posts)
6. Even if the region wasn't war thorn,
Mon Jun 15, 2026, 07:45 PM
Monday

US is sending people to a country where they have never been, they don't know the language. Imagine being dropped off somewhere you have never been and don't know the language. How are these people supposed to survive?

B.See

(9,029 posts)
7. They aren't supposed to. That's the point.
Mon Jun 15, 2026, 08:02 PM
Monday
A woman’s hypothermia death in Pittsburgh after her release from ICE custody is ruled a homicide - AP News

A medical examiner has ruled the death of a Haitian asylum seeker after being released from federal custody a homicide. An attorney representing her family said he expects her relatives to sue Immigration and Customs Enforcement in connection with her death.

Daphy Michel, 31, died March 2. She was found at a bus shelter in Pittsburgh. The Allegheny County Medical Examiner’s Office found her cause of death to be hypothermia and ruled the manner a homicide, “indicating the death was caused by the actions of another individual” and should not be interpreted as a declaration of criminal guilt, the office said in a statement. The office released its findings Friday.

A magistrate said he could not hold her for trial for threatening imaginary people, Murphy said. Afterward, ICE arrested her in her cell, put an ankle monitor on her and took her 25 miles (40 kilometers) away to Pittsburgh, where she sat at a bus shelter for days in winter, he said.

Michel was a native of Haiti who was seeking asylum in the U.S. after arriving at the southern border in 2022, said Joseph Patrick Murphy, her family’s attorney. She was granted humanitarian parole based on urgent humanitarian need, but she did not live to see a hearing scheduled for two weeks after she died, he said.
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