Use of Alien Enemies Act

In a landmark decision, a federal judge has ruled in favor of using a rarely invoked wartime law to deport certain Venezuelan nationals suspected of gang involvement in the United States.

Judge Stephanie Haines, based in Pennsylvania, upheld a presidential order issued in March that labeled Tren de Aragua — a violent gang originating from

Venezuela — as part of an organized incursion into the U.S. The ruling marks the first time a federal court has supported the application of the Alien Enemies Act (AEA) in such a case.

The decision allows federal authorities to proceed with deportations of individuals who meet specific criteria: they must be Venezuelan citizens aged 14 or older, lack legal immigration status, and be identified as members of Tren de Aragua.

Related Posts

Ledger Of The Unwanted Daughter

They thought she was harmless. They thought the uniform meant obedience, that the girl who served plates would swallow every insult, every absence, every lie. But on…

Paperwork Signed, Lives Shattered

The pen fell like a verdict. One signature turned a hospital room into a battlefield—my body on one side, my newborns on the other. Marriage dissolved. Insurance…

Frozen On My Driveway

They didn’t knock. They didn’t call. They just left her there, shivering on the concrete like trash they were done pretending to love. One note. Two suitcases….

Stolen Vows, Sharpened Spine

Consciousness slammed back like a verdict. One moment, there was anesthesia and darkness. The next, a voicemail that detonated my entire life. My parents had sold my…

Heather Locklear’s Living Mirror

She was Hollywood’s golden storm. A face that once ruled prime-time television, now reappearing in a way no one saw coming. Not through scandal, not through a…

Hidden Heiress, Public Execution

The lie shattered like glass. Meatloaf insults, whispered slurs, and snickering “tests” had all been aimed at a woman they thought was powerless, cornered, broke. They drove…