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The cases among deported migrants have alarmed the public in Guatemala and its U.S.-aligned government, which indefinitely suspended deportation flights from the U.S. earlier this month.
The Supreme Court cleared the way for a transgender woman from Guatemala to appeal her deportation from the United States in federal court. The woman argues that she should not have been deported ...
A Manassas, Virginia, woman who was taken into Immigration and Custody Enforcement custody, deported to Guatemala and brought ...
Concerns over deportation are causing immigrants in Oklahoma to avoid court hearings, as highlighted by the case of Cesar ...
Transgender Guatemalan woman's deportation case to get U.S. Supreme Court review. By Daniel ... in 2019 said the government had shown that conditions for LGBT people in Guatemala have improved, ...
A Conesville man has been given a 30-day grace period to gather his belongings and say goodbye to friends and family before ...
A federal judge is slated to hear from Trump administration officials this afternoon on their plans to deport Kilmar Abrego ...
Guatemala's health minister said Tuesday that deportees from the United States were driving up the country's COVID-19 caseload, adding that on one flight some 75% of the deportees tested positive ...
The Supreme Court unanimously ruled that transgender woman Leon Santos-Zacaria, who now goes by Estrella, can continue her fight against deportation to her native Guatemala.
Guatemala, turning the tables on President Trump, halts deportation flights from the U.S. and closes its borders because of the coronavirus.
In the case of Santos-Zacaría, this would suggest that even if she’s not sent back to Guatemala, she could be expelled to El Salvador or any other country that the authorities consider suitable.