- by foxnews
- 08 Apr 2025
U.S. District Judge Kenneth J. Gonzales of New Mexico issued a memo Friday announcing the court had vacated a March 3 status conference for three Venezuelan migrants just five days after it blocked the Trump administration's efforts to transfer the migrants to Guantánamo Bay.
Since then, Gonzales said, respondents had filed a notice of removal "informing the court that all three petitioners were removed to Venezuela, their home country, on Feb. 10, 2025."
Trump has claimed the individuals deported to Guantánamo are "highly dangerous criminal aliens."
But that notion has been sharply disputed by some immigration advocates.
In response, the administration appears to have taken the matter into its own hands.
The motion to vacate noted that, "[b]ecause Petitioners have now been removed to their home country, it is no longer necessary to hold a status conference" on the previously scheduled date.
"Nor is it necessary for parties to update the Court by February 24, 2025," Judge Gonzales said. "Thus, the status conference is hereby vacated."
The deportation comes less than a month after President Donald Trump signed into law the Laken Riley Act, a bipartisan law that gives authorities broad power to deport illegal immigrants accused of crimes.
Since Trump's inauguration, White House officials said that the administration has arrested thousands of people in immigration enforcement actions.
Archaeologists have recently unearthed the remarkably well-preserved remains of a dog from ancient Rome, shedding light on the widespread practice of ritual sacrifice in antiquity.
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