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Tag: Alien Enemies Act

  • While celebrating Maduro’s capture, Venezuelan immigrants worry about deportation

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    After President Trump ordered strikes that led to the capture of Venezuela’s president, Nicolás Maduro, celebrations erupted in Venezuelan communities across the U.S.

    But for many of the hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan immigrants facing possible deportation, their relief and joy were cut by the fear about what comes next from an administration that has zeroed in on Venezuelans as a target.

    “Many of us asked ourselves, ‘What’s going to happen with us now?’” said A.G., a 39-year-old in Tennessee who asked to be identified by her initials because she lacks legal status. Even so, Maduro’s ouster gave her a lot of hope for her mother country.

    Venezuelans began fleeing in droves in 2014 as economic collapse led to widespread food and medicine shortages, as well as political repression. Nearly 8 million Venezuelans are now living outside the country — including 1.2 million in the U.S.

    Venezuelans migrants walk toward Bucaramanga, Colombia, in 2019.

    (Marcus Yam/Los Angeles Times)

    A.G. and her now-18-year-old son arrived at the southern border in 2019. Since then, she said, they have built a good life — they own a transport company with delivery trucks, pay taxes and follow the law.

    Maduro’s fall left her with mixed feelings.

    “He’s obviously a dictator, many people have died because of him and he refused to give up power, but the reason that they entered Venezuela, for me what President Trump did was illegal,” she said. “Innocent people died because of the bombs. I’m asking God that it all be for good reason.”

    Dozens of Venezuelans and others were killed in the U.S. invasion — more than 100, a government official said — including civilians.

    The Trump administration is framing its Venezuela operation as an opportunity for Venezuelans like A.G. “Now, they can return to the country they love and rebuild its future,” said U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services spokesman Matthew Tragesser.

    Katie Blankenship, a Miami-based attorney with Sanctuary of the South who has represented many Venezuelans facing deportation, sees a less promising future.

    “We’re going to see increased targeting of Venezuelans to force them to leave the U.S. into a political and socioeconomic environment that’s likely only more destabilized and subject to more abuse,” she said.

    The Venezuelan community in the U.S. swelled, in part, because the Biden administration expanded pathways for them to enter the country.

    Volunteer help a Venezuelan immigrant at the storage units

    Volunteer help a Venezuelan immigrant at the storage units from a volunteer-run program that distributes donations to recently arrived Venezuelan immigrants in need, in Miami, Fla., in 2023.

    (Eva Marie Uzcategui / Los Angeles Times)

    One of those programs allowed more than 117,000 Venezuelans to purchase flights directly to the U.S. and stay for two years if they had a U.S.-based financial sponsor and passed a background check. Other Venezuelans entered legally at land ports of entry after scheduling interviews with border officers.

    By the end of the Biden administration, more than 600,000 Venezuelans had protection from deportation under Temporary Protected Status, a program used by both Republican and Democratic administrations for immigrants who cannot return home because of armed conflict, natural disaster or other “extraordinary and temporary conditions.”

    On the campaign trail, Trump repeatedly referred to Venezuelan immigrants as criminals, singling them out more than any other nationality — in 64% of speeches, an Axios analysis showed. He has said repeatedly, without evidence that Venezuela emptied its prisons and mental institutions to flood the U.S. with immigrants.

    One of Trump’s first acts as president was to designate the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua as a foreign terrorist organization. Within two months, he invoked an 18th century wartime law, the Alien Enemies Act, to deport 252 Venezuelan men accused of being Tren de Aragua members to El Salvador, where they were imprisoned and tortured despite many having no criminal histories in the U.S. or Latin America.

    Later, the Trump administration stripped away protections for Venezuelans with financial sponsors and TPS, with Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem calling the latter “contrary to the national interest.”

    In a September Federal Register Notice, Noem said that TPS for Venezuelans undercut the administration’s foreign policy objectives because one result of allowing Venezuelans in the U.S. was “relieving pressure on Maduro’s regime to enact domestic reforms and facilitate safe return conditions.” In other words, if Venezuelans returned home, that would pressure the government to enact reforms.

    Attorney General Pam Bondi, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry at a news conference

    Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem, along with U.S. Atty. Gen. Pam Bondi, left, and Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry, right, participates in a news conference near Camp 57 at Angola prison, the Louisiana State Penitentiary and America’s largest maximum-security prison farm, to announce the opening of a new Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facility that will house immigrants convicted of crimes in West Feliciana Parish, Louisiana, on Sept. 3, 2025.

    (Matthew Hilton / AFP via Getty Images)

    The administration has offered contrasting assessments of conditions in Venezuela. Noem wrote that although certain adverse conditions continue, “there are notable improvements in several areas such as the economy, public health, and crime.”

    Throughout the year, though, the State Department continued to reissue an “extreme danger” travel advisory for Venezuela, urging Americans to leave the country immediately.

    Conditions for Venezuelans in the U.S. grew more complicated after a man from Afghanistan was accused of shooting two National Guard members in November; in response, the administration froze the immigration cases of people from 39 countries, including Venezuela, that the administration considers “high-risk.” That means anyone who applied for asylum, a visa, a green card or any other benefit remains in limbo indefinitely.

    After a panel of the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals struck down the Trump administration’s use of the Alien Enemies Act in September, the Justice Department appealed. In a support brief filed in December, the Justice Department cited escalating tensions with Venezuela.

    David Smilde, a Tulane University sociologist and expert on Venezuelan politics, said that invading Venezuela could justify renewed use of the Alien Enemies Act.

    The law says the president can invoke the Alien Enemies Act not only in times of “declared war,” but also when a foreign government threatens or carries out an “invasion” or “predatory incursion” against the U.S.

    “Now it will be difficult, I think, for the court to say, ‘No, you can’t use this,’” Smilde said.

    With U.S. officials promising improved conditions in Venezuela and encouraging citizens to return, Smilde said, they could invoke the Alien Enemies Act to quickly deport undocumented immigrants who don’t leave willingly.

    “There’s several layers to this,” he said, “and none of it looks very good for Venezuelan immigrants.”

    a man wearing an American flag shirt embraces a woman in a church

    This couple from Venezuela shared their story of why they left their three children back in their home country and spoke of the the experiences of their travel to the United States at the Parkside Community Church in Sacramento on June 16, 2023.

    (Jose Luis Villegas / For The Times)

    Jose, a 28-year-old Venezuelan living east of Los Angeles, fled Venezuela in 2015 after being imprisoned and beaten for criticizing the government. He lived in Colombia and Peru before illegally crossing the U.S. border in 2022, and now has a pending asylum application. Jose asked to be identified by his middle name out of fear of retaliation by the U.S. government.

    The news this week that an ICE agent had shot and killed a woman in Minnesota heightened his anxiety.

    “You come here because supposedly this is a country with freedom of expression, and there is more safety, but with this government, now you’re afraid you’ll get killed,” he said. “And that was a U.S. citizen. Imagine what they could do to me?”

    People visit a memorial for Renee Nicole Good on Jan. 7 in Minneapolis.

    People visit a memorial for Renee Nicole Good on Jan. 7 in Minneapolis.

    (Scott Olson / Getty Images)

    Jose qualifies for a work permit based on his pending asylum, but his application for one is frozen because of the executive order following the National Guard shooting.

    The news of Maduro’s arrest was bittersweet, Jose said, because his mother and grandmother didn’t live to witness that day. He said his mother died last year of kidney failure due to lack of medical care, leaving him as the primary breadwinner for his two young sisters who remain in Venezuela with their father, who is disabled.

    Still, he said he’s happy with what Trump has done in Venezuela.

    “People are saying he’s stealing our petroleum,” he said, “but for 25 years, Cuba, China and Iran have been stealing the petroleum and it didn’t improve our lives.”

    Many Venezuelans were encouraged by news that Venezuela would release a “significant number” of political prisoners as a peace gesture.

    For Jose, that’s not enough. Venezuela’s government ordered police to search for anyone involved in promoting or supporting the attack by U.S. forces, leading to detentions of journalists and civilians.

    “Venezuela remains the same,” he said. “The same disgrace, the same poverty and the same government repression.”

    A.G. said she was heartened to hear Noem say Sunday on Fox News that every Venezeulan who had TPS “has the opportunity to apply for refugee status and that evaluation will go forward.” But the administration quickly backtracked and said that was not the case.

    Instead, Noem and other administration officials have doubled down on the notion that Venezuelans without permanent lawful status should leave. Noem told Fox News that there are no plans to pause deportation flights despite the political uncertainty in Venezuela.

    Tragesser, the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services spokesman, said the agency’s posture hasn’t changed.

    “USCIS encourages all Venezuelans unlawfully in the U.S. to use the CBP Home app for help with a safe and orderly return to their country,” he said.

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    Andrea Castillo

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  • Supreme Court to Review Trump’s Birthright Citizenship Order

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    The Supreme Court is looking to consider the executive order that lower courts have blocked as unconstitutional.

    The Supreme Court is set to meet in private on Friday with the Trump Administration’s Birthright Citizenship order on the agenda.

    The debate on Birthright Citizenship centers on children born to parents who are in the United States illegally or temporarily and how that determines the child’s citizenship status. Currently, if a child is born in the United States, then they, with rare exceptions, become an American citizen, regardless of their parents’ citizenship status. Trump wants to get rid of this rule.

    So far, the order to strike down the rule has been blocked by lower courts across the US. But if the Supreme Court decides to step in now, the case will be argued in the spring and bring a definitive ruling by early summer.

    The Birthright Citizenship order was signed by Trump on his first day of his second term in the white house. As a part of his greater plans for immigration, like increased immigration enforcement in several cities, and the first peacetime usage of the 18th-century Alien Enemies Act.

    It’s hard to say what the high court may say about this issue, because there has been a mixed bag of responses to Trump’s immigration related orders. They stopped the usage of the Alien Enemies Act to deport alleged Venezuelan gang members without court hearings. But they have allowed the resumption of sweeping immigration stops in and around Los Angeles. An order that was originally stopped by a lower court on the practice of stopping people solely based on their race, language, job or location.

    This is the first of the Trump Administration-related immigration policies to reach the Supreme Court for a final ruling. Lower courts have struck down the executive order as unconstitutional. If the order passes, then it would contradict more than 125 years of how the U.S. interprets the 14th Amendment. A part of the Constitution that confers citizenship on everyone born on American soil.

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    Tara Nguyen

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  • Fifth Circuit Will Rehear Alien Enemies Act Case En Banc

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    AI-generated image.

    Earlier this week the US Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit decided to grant an en banc rehearing in W.M.M. v. Trump. The panel decision in that case ruled that Trump’s invocation of the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 was illegal, because illegal migration and drug trafficking and other activities of the Venezuelan drug gang Tren de Aragua do not qualify as a war, “invasion,” or “predatory incursion.” The AEA can only be used to detain and deport immigrants when one of these extraordinary conditions, or a threat thereof, exists.The case will now be reheard by all 17 active Fifth Circuit judges.

    In an amicus brief I coauthored in the case on behalf of the Brennan Center, the Cato Institute, and others, we argue that “invasion” and “predatory incursion” require a military attack, and that courts should not defer to presidential assertions that these extraordinary conditions exist. As James Madison put it in addressing this issue, “invasion is an operation of war.”

    Otherwise, the AEA and the Constitution’s grant of extraordinary emergency powers when an “invasion” exists could be invoked by the president anytime he wants, thereby creating grave dangers to civil liberties and to the separation of powers. For example, the Constitution states that, in the event  of “invasion,” the federal government can suspend the writ of habeas corpus, thereby authorizing indefinite detention without due process – not only of recent immigrants, but also US citizens.

    Prominent conservative Judge Andrew Oldham wrote a lengthy dissent to the panel decision, arguing that the definition of “invasion” and other terms in the AEA is left to the unreviewable discretion of the executive. I outlined some key flaws in his argument here. In a solo concurring opinion in United States v. Abbott, a previous Fifth Circuit en banc case, Judge James Ho, another well-known conservative, similarly argued  the definition of “invasion” is an unreviewable “political question,” left to the determination of the executive, and also of state governments (under Ho’s approach, they too can claim and “invasion” exists whenever there is illegal migration or drug smuggling). I criticized Judge Ho’s reasoning here.

    Both Ho’s approach and Oldham’s would give the president (and, in Ho’s case, also state governments) unlimited authority to declare an “invasion” at any time, and thereby wield sweeping authority to undermine civil liberties and the separation of powers. The federal government could use this power to detain and deport even legal immigrants, and to suspend the writ of habeas corpus (including for US citizens). Under the Constitution, in the event of “invasion” state governments can “engage in war” even without congressional authorization. I wrote about the dangers of that in greater detail here, as well as in the amicus brief.

    Such vast unilateral authority goes against the text and original meaning of both the Constitution and the Alien Enemies Act. British violations of the writ of habeas corpus were one of the main grievances that led to the American Revolution, and the Founding Fathers did not intend to give the president  the power to replicate those abuses anytime he might want.

    I will have more to say about these issues as the AEA litigation continues in this case and in other cases currently before various federal courts. We will likely file an updated version of our amicus brief before the en banc Fifth Circuit.

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    Ilya Somin

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  • Fifth Circuit Rules Trump’s Use of Alien Enemies Act is Illegal

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    A prison guard transfers Alien Enemies Act deportees from the U.S., alleged to be Venezuelan gang members, to the Terrorism Confinement Center in Tecoluca, El Salvador. Mar. 16, 2025 (El Salvador Presidential Press Office)

     

    Yesterday, in W.M.M. v. Trump, the US Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit ruled that President Trump’s invocation of the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 as a tool to deport Venezuelans is illegal. While multiple federal district courts have issued similar rulings, as have individual concurring opinions by judges on two other circuit courts, this is the first full-blown appellate court decision on the subject. It is therefore an important precedent. There is a lengthy 130 page dissenting opinion by Judge Andrew Oldham. But it’s serious flaws merely confirm the weaknesses of the government’s position.

    The AEA allows detention and deportation of foreign citizens of relevant states (including legal immigrants, as well as illegal ones) “[w]henever there is a declared war between the United States and any foreign nation or government, or any invasion or predatory incursion is perpetrated, attempted, or threatened against the territory of the United States by any foreign nation or government.” Trump has tried to use the AEA to deport Venezuelan migrants the administration claims are members of the Tren de Aragua drug gang.

    The Fifth Circuit majority opinion by Judge Leslie Southwick (a Republican George W. Bush appointee) holds that TdA’s activities – drug smuggling, illegal migration, and related crimes – don’t qualify as an “invasion” or a “predatory” incursion and therefore the AEA cannot be used here. Everyone agrees there is no declared war.

    On the definition of “invasion,” Judge Southwick concludes, after a review of the evidence:

    Congress’s use of the word in the AEA is consistent with the use in the Constitution, that “invasion” is a term about war in the traditional sense and requires military action by a foreign nation. Petitioners have the sense of the distinctions in saying that responding to another country’s invasion is defensive; declaring war is an offensive, assertive action by Congress; and predatory incursion is for lesser conflicts. Of course, after this country has been attacked by an enemy with invading forces, Congress might then declare a war. That occurred in World War II after the attack on Pearl Harbor. Still, when the invasion precedes a declaration, the AEA applies when the invasion occurs or is attempted. Therefore, we define an invasion for purposes of the AEA as an act of war involving the entry into this country by a military force of or at least directed by another country or nation, with a hostile intent.

    Every other court to have ruled on the definition of “invasion” has reached similar conclusions, and I argue for that conclusion in the amicus brief I coauthored in W.M.M. on behalf of the Brennan Center, the Cato Institute, and others.

    Here is the Fifth Circuit on the definition of “predatory incursion”:

    These different sources of contemporary meaning that we have identified from dictionaries, the writings of those from the time period of the enactment, and from the different requirements of the Alien Enemies Act and the Alien Friends Act, convince us that a “predatory incursion” described armed forces of some size and cohesion, engaged in something less than an invasion, whose objectives could vary widely, and are directed by a foreign government or nation. The success of an incursion could transform it into an invasion. In fact, it would be hard to distinguish some attempted invasions from a predatory incursion.

    This too is similar to previous court decisions, and to the approach outlined in our amicus brief, which explains that a “predatory incursion” is a smaller-scale act of war. The one exception is a district court opinion that adopted an extremely broad definition of “predatory incursion,” which I critiqued here.

    The majority also persuasively argues that the definitions of “invasion,” “predatory incursion” and other statutory terms are not unreviewable issues  simply left to executive discretion.

    The majority does, however, rule that courts must, to a degree, defer to presidential fact-finding regarding whether an “invasion” or a “predatory incursion” is occurring. It concludes, here, that the facts alleged in the President’s Proclamation do not meet the requirements of the correct definition of that term. This may leave open the possibility that the president could simply legalize the AEA by claiming the existence of different (more egregious) “facts,” even if the claims are patently false. I have criticized excessive deference on such factual issues in this recent article, and in the amicus brief. Deference on factual questions should not allow the president to invoke extraordinary emergency powers merely by mouthing some words and making bogus, unsubstantiated claims.

    That said, the majority does suggest that factual deference must be limited:

    The Supreme Court’s recent J.G.G. opinion shows Ludecke is to be understood as requiring courts to interpret the AEA after the President has invoked it…. Interpretation
    cannot be just an academic exercise, i.e., a court makes the effort to define a term like “invasion” but then cannot evaluate the facts before it for their fit with the interpretation. Thus, interpretation of the AEA allows a court to determine whether a declaration of war by Congress remains in effect, or whether an invasion or a predatory incursion has occurred. In other words, those questions are justiciable, and the executive’s determination that certain facts constitute one or more of those events is not conclusive. The Supreme Court informs us that we are to interpret, and we do not create special rules for the AEA but simply use traditional statutory interpretive tools.

    If courts must “use traditional… interpretive tools” and “determine… whether an invasion or a predatory incursion has occurred,” they cannot simply blindly acquiesce to whatever factual claims the government might make, no matter how specious. Otherwise, interpretation will indeed become “just an academic exercise.”

    Prominent conservative Judge Andrew Oldham wrote a lengthy 130 page dissent. He’s undoubtedly a highly capable jurist. But his herculean efforts here just underscore the radical and dangerous nature of the government’s position.

    Surprisingly, Judge Oldham doesn’t seriously dispute the definitions of “invasion” and “predatory incursion.” He just argues that these issues are left to the completely unreviewable discretion of the executive. If that’s true, the president could use the AEA to detain or deport virtually any noncitizens he wants, at any time, for any reason, so long as he proclaims there is an “invasion” or “predatory incursion,” regardless of whether anything even remotely resembling these things is actually happening. A power that is supposed to be used only in the event of a dire threat to national security would become a routine tool that can be deployed at the president’s whim.

    And, under Judge Oldham’s analysis, the president also could deport and detain these people with little, if any, due process. He contends the government has no obligation to prove that the people detained are actually TdA members. And in fact there is no evidence that most of those deported under the AEA are members of the gang or have committed any crimes at all.  Thus, Judge Oldham is essentially claiming the AEA gives the president unlimited, unreviewable power to detain and deport non-citizens – including legal migrants – whenever he wants (again, so long as he proclaims the right words).

    Nothing in the text or history of the AEA even approaches this. Instead the text says that the AEA can only be used when a war, invasion, predatory incursion or threat thereof, exists, not merely when the president says so.

    Oldham argues in detail that various precedents require the latter outcome. But, as the majority notes, those precedents – including the Supreme Court’s recent decision in J.G.G. specifically indicate that there is room for judicial review. Moreover, if the AEA really did grant the president such unlimited power, one would have expected contemporaries in 1798 to point that out and object on constitutional grounds, as they did in the case of the contemporaneous Alien Friends Act, which really did give the president sweeping deportation and detention powers, even in peacetime, and which was duly denounced as unconstitutional by James Madison and Thomas Jefferson, among others. The Alien Enemies Act, by contrast, was far less controversial, precisely because it was understood to be limited to genuine wartime situations, not anything the president might speciously label as such.

    Moreover, under Suspension Clause of the Constitution, in the event of an “invasion,” the federal government can suspend the writ of habeas corpus, and thereby detain people – including US citizens – without any due process. There is no way the Founders understood themselves to have given the president unreviewable authority to trigger that power anytime he wants.

    I won’t try to go through all of Judge Oldham’s analysis of precedent here. But I will give one example of how problematic it is. The judge argues that Supreme Court’s 1862 decision in The Prize Cases gives the president unreviewable authority to determine there is a war going on, and exercise war powers accordingly. The majority opinion in that case does no such thing. Rather, it emphasized the fact that then-ongoing Civil War was a conflict “which all the world acknowledges to be the greatest civil war known in the history of the human race.” Thus, President Lincoln’s power to establish a blockade in response could not be negated by “by subtle definitions and ingenious sophisms.”

    The Court then went on to make the point cited by Oldham:

    Whether the President, in fulfilling his duties as Commander-in-chief in suppressing an insurrection, has met with such armed hostile resistance and a civil war of such alarming proportions as will compel him to accord to them the character of belligerents is a question to be decided by him, and this Court must be governed by the decisions and acts of the political department of the Government to which this power was entrusted. “He must determine what degree of force the crisis demands.” The proclamation of blockade is itself official and conclusive evidence to the Court that a state of war existed which demanded and authorized a recourse to such a measure under the circumstances peculiar to the case.

    But notice the president only gets deference on the question of whether the “insurrection” he is “fulfilling his duties” by combatting is one of “such alarming proportions” as to justify a wartime blockade. He does not get deference on the question of whether an insurrection exists in the first place (in that case, as the Court noted, it obviously did). Had Lincoln instead imposed a blockade to prevent, say, illegal smuggling of contraband goods  and then claimed smuggling qualifies as war, he would not get the same deference.

    Judge Oldham’s reliance on other precedents has similar flaws. Nearly all of them also arose from genuinely massive wars, not attempts to pass off drug smuggling or other similar activity as an “invasion.” Oldham complains that “[f]or over 200 years, courts have recognized that the AEA vests sweeping discretionary powers in the Executive,” and that “until President Trump took office a second time, courts had never countermanded the President’s determination that an invasion, or other similar hostile activity, was threatened or ongoing.” But the AEA has previously only been invoked in connection with three indisputable international conflicts: the War of 1812, World War I, and World War II. You don’t have to be an expert to see the difference between these conflicts and the activities of a drug gang.

    The majority, the concurring opinion by Judge Ramirez, and the dissent also address a number of other issues, particularly various procedural questions. I will pass over them for now, as this post is already long.

    The Trump administration may well appeal this case to the Supreme Court. If the Court takes it, I hope they, too, will recognize that the AEA doesn’t give the president a blank check to wield sweeping extraordinary power whenever he wants.

    In the meantime, litigation over this issue continues in various federal courts around the country.

     

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    Ilya Somin

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  • What did a court rule about Tren de Aragua deportations?

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    A federal appeals court ruled Sept. 2 that the Trump administration cannot use an 18th century law to quickly deport suspected gang members.

    Its decision largely hinged on the administration’s assertion that the Venezuela-based gang Tren de Aragua had invaded the United States.

    “Applying our obligation to interpret the (Alien Enemies Act), we conclude that the findings do not support that an invasion or a predatory incursion has occurred,” the ruling said.

    The conservative Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals’ 2-1 decision effectively blocks the government from using the 1798 Alien Enemies Act’s fast-track process to deport people it says belong to the gang. Such an invasion or incursion is a necessary condition for the U.S. to deport people using the law.

    Here are five things to know about the Alien Enemies Act, the court’s ruling and what could come next:

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    How did the Trump administration use the law before the ruling? 

    On March 15, President Donald Trump invoked the Alien Enemies Act, which lets the president detain and deport people from a “hostile nation or government” without a hearing when the U.S. is either at war with that country or the country has “perpetrated, attempted, or threatened” an invasion or raid legally called a “predatory incursion” against the U.S. 

    That same day, the Trump administration deported more than 230 Venezuelan men to the Center for Terrorism Confinement, or CECOT, a maximum-security El Salvador prison. An investigation by ProPublica and other news organizations found the vast majority of the men had no criminal records. And none of the men’s names appeared in a list of alleged gang members kept by Venezuelan law enforcement and international law enforcement agency Interpol.

    In July, as part of a prisoner exchange between the U.S. and Venezuela, the men deported from the U.S. and held in CECOT were returned to Venezuela.

    Several legal challenges followed after Trump’s invocation of the law. But the Sept. 2 appellate court’s ruling is the first to address whether Trump legally invoked it.

    Migrants deported months ago by the United States to El Salvador under the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown arrive at Simon Bolívar International Airport in Maiquetia, Venezuela, July 18, 2025. (AP)

    What did the appeals court say about an invasion?

    The court said Tren de Aragua has not invaded or carried out a predatory incursion against the U.S.

    The appellate court disagreed with Trump’s March assertion that, “Evidence irrefutably demonstrates that (Tren de Aragua) has invaded the United States.” To determine whether Tren de Aragua had invaded or carried out a predatory incursion, the court had to define what each of those terms meant.

    “We define an invasion for purposes of the (Alien Enemies Act) as an act of war involving the entry into this country by a military force of or at least directed by another country or nation, with a hostile intent,” the ruling said. 

    As for a predatory incursion, the court said the term “described armed forces of some size and cohesion, engaged in something less than an invasion, whose objectives could vary widely, and are directed by a foreign government or nation.”

    The court ruled that a country “encouraging its residents and citizens to enter this country illegally is not the modern-day equivalent of sending an armed, organized force to occupy, to disrupt, or to otherwise harm the United States.”

    The court said the mass migration of Venezuelan immigrants did not constitute an armed or an organized force.

    Was any part of the ruling favorable to the Trump administration? 

    The court said it does not have the power to rule on the accuracy of the information the Trump administration presented about how closely Tren de Aragua is tied to the Venezuelan government led by President Nicolas Maduro.

    But the court ruled that Tren de Aragua can be considered a government or nation for the law’s purposes, assuming Trump’s assertion is true that the group is being led by the Venezuelan government. 

    Nevertheless, the court ruled, there’s no invasion.

    Trump’s assertion about the Maduro administration’s links to Tren de Aragua were contradicted by an intelligence community assessment.  

    “While Venezuela’s permissive environment enables (Tren de Aragua) to operate, the Maduro regime probably does not have a policy of cooperating with TDA and is not directing TDA movement to and operations in the United States,” the National Intelligence Council said in an April report.

    In May, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard fired two National Intelligence Council officials who wrote the assessment, according to The Washington Post

    A man walks in front of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Jan. 7, 2015, in New Orleans. (AP)

    What did the court say about due process?

    The appellate court said, based on available information, an updated process the government is using to inform people they will be deported under the law seemed to follow due process requirements. However, it asked the lower federal court to rule on what constitutes sufficient government notice.

    In May, before the government updated its notification process, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in an unsigned opinion that the Trump administration hadn’t given immigrants who it said it would deport under the Alien Enemies Act enough time to exercise their due process rights. 

    At the time, the government had given immigrants about 24-hour notice that they would be deported without information about how to contest the deportation. The Supreme Court asked the appellate court to determine how much notice is necessary for the government to uphold immigrants’ constitutional due process rights. 

    While the case was being decided by the appellate court, the Trump administration updated the document it gives immigrants as notice that they will be deported under the law. Part of the change included giving immigrants seven days to challenge the deportation. 

    What will likely happen next?

    The appellate court’s decision stops Alien Enemies Act deportations in the three states in its jurisdiction: Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas. Other courts could use the ruling as precedent in their decisions. 

    The Trump administration can appeal the appellate court ruling either to the full appeals court or to the U.S. Supreme Court. The White House didn’t specify whether it would appeal or to which court.

    “The authority to conduct national security operations in defense of the United States and to remove terrorists from the United States rests solely with the President,” Abigail Jackson, a White House spokesperson, said. “We expect to be vindicated on the merits in this case.”

    RELATED: Ask PolitiFact: Is Tren de Aragua invading the US, as Trump says? Legal experts say no.

    RELATED: Can Donald Trump use a 1798 law to carry out mass deportations?

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