President Donald Trump wrote a letter that will be sent to migrants who legally obtained citizenship. (Bonnie Cash/UPI/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
DHS officials have previously claimed an "undisputed authority" to deport criminal illegal aliens to third countries that have agreed to accept them. "If these activist judges had their way, aliens who are so uniquely barbaric that their own countries won’t take them back, including convicted murderers, child rapists and drug traffickers, would walk free on American streets," former Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in June, after the Supreme Court temporarily permitted the Trump administration to continue its deportation policy amid legal challenges.
The Department of Homeland Security "has adopted a policy whereby it may take people and drop them off in parts unknown — in so-called 'third countries,' and, ‘as long as the Department doesn’t already know that there’s someone standing there waiting to shoot… that’s fine,’" Murphy said in his opinion Wednesday.
"It is not fine, nor is it legal."
Murphy also rejected the Trump administration's claim that certain migrants living in the U.S. illegally lacked due process, noting that the clause applies to all "persons" within the U.S., regardless of immigration status.
"These are our laws, and it is with profound gratitude for the unbelievable luck of being born in the United States of America that this Court affirms these and our nation’s bedrock principle: that no ‘person’ in this country may be 'deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law,'" Murphy said.
Murphy stayed the ruling from taking force for 15 days to allow the Trump administration time to appeal the case to the First Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, given what the judge acknowledged was the "importance" and "unusual history" of the case in question.
The ruling comes after Murphy presided for months over a class-action lawsuit filed by migrants challenging deportations to third countries, including South Sudan and El Salvador, as well as Costa Rica and Guatemala, which the administration has reportedly eyed in its ongoing wave of deportations.
'WOEFULLY INSUFFICIENT': US JUDGE REAMS TRUMP ADMIN FOR DAYS-LATE DEPORTATION INFO
Breanne Deppisch is a national politics reporter for Fox News Digital covering the Trump administration, with a focus on the Justice Department, FBI and other national news. She previously covered national politics at the Washington Examiner and The Washington Post, with additional bylines in Politico Magazine, the Colorado Gazette and others. You can send tips to Breanne at Breanne.Deppisch@fox.com, or follow her on X at @breanne_dep.
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