Jerce Reyes Barrios and the wrong tattoo

This is about the deportation on March 15 to El Salvador’s prisons of several hundred Venezuelans. Attorneys have filed suit in Federal D.C. district court (Judge James Emanuel Boasberg, J.J.G. v. Trump). Jerce Reyes Barrios is one of the persons deported.

The New Republic writes, “According to an attorney [Linette Tobin]…Reyes Barrios’s petition for asylum was pending, with a hearing scheduled for April, when he was deported March 15 to El Salvador without any notice to his family or attorney…. The government accuses Reyes Barrios of being a member of the Tren de Aragua gang based on two “Gang Membership Identification Criteria.” The first was a tattoo on his arm of a crown on top of a soccer ball with a rosary and the word “Dios,” which is Spanish for “God.” Reyes Barrios chose this tattoo because it resembles the logo for Spanish soccer team Real Madrid. The second was a social media post with a picture of Reyes Barrios making “rock and roll” or “I love you” hand gestures.”

Here is Reyes Barrio’s submission to the court. Here are many other submissions.

Janine Mooney’s weeks in ICE detention

The Trump Administration is enamored by detention and deportation because Trump can act like a dictator, ignoring the spirit and law of due process, imposing humiliation on persons. Detention and deportation are the Administration’s signature acts.  Here is a summary of story of Jasmine Mooney, published in the Guadian on March 19.

Jasmine Mooney, a Canadian citizen, was detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) for two weeks despite having a valid work visa. Without explanation or legal recourse, she was treated as if she were a criminal, stripped of her belongings, and subjected to harsh detention conditions. She was transferred between detention centers, shackled, and placed in freezing, overcrowded cells with no access to legal assistance. Her ordeal revealed the systemic mistreatment of detainees, many of whom had no criminal records but were held in indefinite bureaucratic limbo.

Arbitrary Detention Without Explanation

Mooney was initially at an immigration office discussing her visa status when she was suddenly told to put her hands against the wall, frisked like a criminal, and detained. She was given no reason, no chance to call a lawyer, and no timeline for how long she would be held. Every time she asked for information, the response was a vague “I don’t know.”

Inhumane Conditions in Freezing Cells

For the first two days, she was locked in a tiny, freezing cement cell with bright fluorescent lights that never turned off. She and five other women were given only a thin aluminum sheet as a “blanket,” and there was no way to know the time. She distrusted the food, so she fasted, unsure of when she would be released.

Shackling and Forced Transfers Like Criminals

When Mooney and other detainees were transferred between facilities, they were shackled in chains—hands bound to their waists, feet restrained, making movement difficult. They endured a 24-hour, sleepless, grueling transport, crammed into a bus with men and women packed together. No one was told where they were going.

Degrading Medical and Hygiene Practices

Upon arriving at the San Luis Regional Detention Center, all female detainees were forced to undergo pregnancy tests while squatting over a communal toilet in a filthy cell, holding cups of urine as a nurse dropped tests into them. They were given one Styrofoam cup for water, one plastic spoon to reuse for every meal, and hand towels instead of real towels for showers. The lights were left on 24/7, ensuring sleep deprivation.

Why Immigration actions fit into autocratic aspirations

Timothy Snyder, a Yale Professor (here and here) wrote a Substack posting titled “deportation action as regime change.”   Executive action to bar entry into the country and to deport persons has a specially resonant role for aspiring autocrats in a democratic society.  I will explain.

Immigration laws, extremely complicated and hard for an outsider to penetrate, can include provisions that give the head of state extraordinary discretion to respond to national security emergencies for which the head of state has exclusive powers to declare. In the past ten days, Trump as invoked so such provisions: (1) the Alien Enemies Act (with regards to Tren de Aragua), and  (2)Section 237(a)(4)(C)(i) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (with regard to Mahmoud Kahlil). He has also invoked (3) the Alien Registration Act (this has not burst into flames as yet).

There are several features of the first two that are attractive to the Trump Administration. First, they brush up against constitutional rights to due process – Trump is using these actions to create a constitutional confrontation that he has been seeking. These are in effect test cases for a broader assault on the judiciary seen (correctly) as protecting these rights.  Contempt of court is a deliberate feature of his challenge.

Second, deportation is in Snyder’s words great theater. “This [Tren de Aragua] deportation was planned as a political spectacle. The deportees were carefully chosen, as was the language used to describe them. The messaging was obviously coordinated in advance. And the entire humiliating procedure was carried out before cameras that were already in place. The videos that are being distributed are not some assemblage of footage caught haphazardly by cell phones. They are the result of fixed cameras, set in place in advance, with camera operators awaiting the action. The result is propaganda film worthy of the 1930s…”

The Tren de Aragua case is a very mild version of the Reichstag fire.

Third, as Presidents Obama and Biden practiced during their tenure, executive action on immigration is an especially accessible means for a president to arrogate to themselves Congressional functions.  

In summary, in these two actions in recent days, Trump has dramatically thrown down the gauntlet to the judicial independence and has further neutered Congress’ role in immigration.  Much easier to do this with immigration than with, for example, climate policy or national defence.

The case of Jeanette Vizguerra, Colorado resident

Response to the ICE in Colorado arrest on March 17 of Jeanette Vizguerra, a well known advocate for immigrants, unauthorized, in the U.S. for over 20 years — within 24 hours the Colorado Immigrant Rights Coalition issued a statement signed by 198 parties, including some immigrant advocates outside the state.

For the story, go to the Colorado Sun here.

Here is Catholic Charities San Diego’s program to protect immigrants from ICE

San Diego Catholic Charities Mobilizing Resistance to ICE Arrests

Presentation by Appaswamy Vino Pajanor, Chief Executive Officer, Catholic Charities of San Diego, Center for Migration Studies, March 13 2025 (edited transcript).

Introduction Catholic Charities of San Diego, part of the larger Caritas network, is dedicated to humanitarian aid and social justice. Rooted in Christian teachings, the organization assists individuals regardless of their faith or background. In response to increasing immigration enforcement, Catholic Charities has taken proactive measures to support and protect migrant communities.

Background and Context

  • Catholic Charities in San Diego operates within the Diocese of San Diego, covering both San Diego and Imperial counties.
  • The organization responds to humanitarian needs, whether disasters, hunger, or displacement.
  • In 2021, California approached Catholic Charities to assist migrants released by Border Patrol and ICE, leading to the development of large-scale relief efforts.

Formation of the Immigration Task Force

  • In December 2024, Cardinal McElroy established an Immigration Task Force to guide the diocese’s response to increasing immigration challenges.
  • The goals of the task force include:
    • Showing solidarity with immigrant communities.
    • Producing and distributing resources to inform and support immigrants.
    • Educating parishioners and the broader community on Catholic social teachings regarding immigration.

Strategic Response to ICE Enforcement

  1. Real-Time Information Access
    • The organization created two websites: org (English) and plantheemergency.org (Spanish) to provide up-to-date information.
    • A QR code system was developed for quick access to legal rights and emergency contacts.
    • Over 100,000 resource cards were printed and distributed across parishes.
  2. Education and Training for Religious Leaders
    • Workshops were organized to educate parish leaders, business managers, and school principals on legal rights and best practices.
    • Training sessions included how to handle ICE subpoenas, legal search parameters, and constitutional protections.
  3. Community Outreach and Know-Your-Rights Workshops
    • Virtual and in-person “Know Your Rights” workshops were launched to educate both documented and undocumented individuals.
    • Sessions were held in safe environments such as church sanctuaries and post-mass gatherings to foster trust and comfort.
    • These initiatives reinforce the belief that churches are spaces of refuge and dignity.
  4. Visible Solidarity and Support
    • Following Pope Francis’ emphasis on visible accompaniment, Catholic Charities leaders actively engage with affected communities.
    • The organization fosters reassurance that no one is alone in facing these challenges.
    • Personal testimonies highlight the ongoing risks, even for documented individuals, reinforcing the importance of the advocacy work.

Conclusion Catholic Charities of San Diego remains committed to supporting vulnerable populations amid shifting immigration policies. Through strategic planning, real-time resource distribution, community education, and advocacy, the organization stands firm in its mission to uphold human dignity, justice, and compassion.

 

Deportation tactics and the Rasha Alawieh case

Veronica Cardenas wrote in the Guardian: “[As] I saw firsthand in my 13 years as an assistant chief counsel for ICE the US immigration system was not designed to grant due process or ensure fairness; instead, it was built to prioritize deportation as a fallback when criminal prosecutions weren’t politically desirable or feasible.”

On March 13 Dr. Rasha Alawieh, who works at Brown Medicine and Rhode Island Hospital and held a H-1B visa, was barred at Boston Logan Airport from re-entering the United States. Alawieh is a citizen of Lebanon, to where she had flown from Boston a few weeks before to visit family.

The Boston Globe has covered the case and the following come largely from it.

According to the Globe, Judge Leo T. Sorokin issued an order on March 14 saying Alawieh should not be moved outside of Massachusetts without 48 hours notice. But he said that message apparently did not reach immigration officials in time, and a plane carrying Alawieh left for Paris.

Clare Saunders, one of Alaweih’s attorneys, said she went to Logan and tried repeatedly to attract the attention of federal officers. From her account, the officers pointedly refused to acknowledge her presence – much in line with Veronica Cardenas’ observation.

Today, March 17, US Customs and Border Protection told the judge that it has found on her phone photos of Hezbollah fighters and Hassan Nasrallah, secretary general of Hezbollah who was killed on Sept 27,2024 by an Isreali air strike and whose funeral she attended. Per the Globe, according to ICE,  “I have a lot of WhatsApp groups with families and friends who send them,” she replied. “I am a Shia Muslim, and he is a religious figure. He has a lot of teachings, and he is highly regarded in the Shia community. He the head of Hezbollah.” The officer asked if she knew that Hezbollah had been designated as a terrorist organization. “Yes,” she said. “I’m not much into politics. But yes.”

Boston law firm Arnold and Porter, who had initially signed on to represent Alawieh, told Judge Sorokin that they wish to remove themselves from the case.

The White House invokes the Alien Enemies Act of 1798

The White House today (March 15) invoked the Alien Enemies Act, which permits the government to detain and deport persons who are participating in an invasion. The White House said that members of Tren de Aragua( TdA) are part of an Venezuelan-backed invasion: “I find and declare that TdA is perpetrating, attempting, and threatening an invasion or predatory incursion against the territory of the United States. TdA is undertaking hostile actions and conducting irregular warfare against the territory of the United States both directly and at the direction, clandestine or otherwise, of the Maduro regime in Venezuela.”

To win in court, the administration needs to show that members of Tren de Aragua are agents of the government of Venezuela, that Venezuela is waging war against the United States, and that the persons to be deported are members of Tren de Aragua. The ACLU is leading the court challenge to the order.

The order does not affect citizens or lawful permanent residents – the latter exclusion is interesting because in the Mahmoud Kahlil case, the Kahlil, is a lawful permanent resident. The internment of Japanese in World War 2, two thirds of whom were American citizens, was done using Executive Order 9066 (1942) and not the Alien Enemies Act, because the latter did not apply to citizens.

Impacted at this time are the some 300 Tren de Aragua members who have been arrested and are scheduled to be flown and put into prison in El Salvador, for which the United States will reportedly pay El Salvador $6 million for one year of detention. Apparently another 214 persons have been arrested.

The Alien Enemies Act is one of four Alien and Sedition Acts enacted in 1798 in response to threats of war and concerns about enemy sympathizers. It applies only when there is a declared war or de facto incursion of a foreign power.

Among its provisions is the following: “all natives, citizens, denizens, or subjects of the hostile nation or government, being males of the age of fourteen years and upwards, who shall be within the United States and not actually naturalized, shall be liable to be apprehended, restrained, secured, and removed as alien enemies.” The Supreme Court in The Supreme Court in Ludecke v. Watkins (1948) established the power to deport without court review.

For text and background of all Aliens and Sedition Acts, go here.

 

 

The case of Mahmoud Kahlil in broad context

On March 8 ICE arrested and detained Columbia University graduate student Mahmoud Kahlil with intent to deport him, applying a provision in immigration law. This action at first blush is an attack on non-citizens who act in ways that expose them to threat of deportation. But the more dangerous threat is that this arrest is part of a broad assault on the autonomy of educational institutions in American society.

This is evident by two further actions of the federal government. One is a demand that Columbia reorganize its internal academic department structure. Another is a demand made to 60 colleges and universities.

Here is a thumbnail review:

Mahmoud Khalil, born in a refugee camp in Syria, moved to the U.S. in 2022 and became a legal permanent resident. He earned a master’s degree from Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs in December 2024.  While he was a student, he was a visible participant in anti-Isreal protests that included an encampment on campus in April and May 2024, He was arrested by ICE on March 8, 2025, under the personal order of  Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

The legal grounds used by Rubio was a rarely used provision in immigration law, Section 237(a)(4)(C)(i) of the Immigration and Nationality Act which states that an alien is deportable if: “an alien whose presence or activities in the United States the Secretary of State has reasonable ground to believe would have potentially serious adverse foreign policy consequences for the United States…”

This law is so rarely used that Kahlil’s attorney apparently cited only one instance in recent history of its use, which was an attempt to deport a former Mexican deputy general attorney. The case of Mario Salvador Ruiz-Massieu began in 1996. in 1999 a judge in U.S. Department of Justice’s Board of Immigration Appeals wrote that the law was unconstitutional because it violated basic due process protection guaranteed by the constitution. In another setting, none other than Donald Trump’s sister Maryann Trump Barry critiqued the law as unconstitutional.   In 2007, a case brought against eight alleged supporters of terrorism (the “LA 8”), was finally closed with no deportation, having been opened in 1987.

Kahlil’s case will likely go before an immigration court judge.  It seems to me likely that the administration will look to other rarely used emergency provisions in law to deport some one without judicial review.

The federal government has a larger target then a single graduate student. It has suspended $400 million in grants to Columbia. On March 13, the government wrote that the grants will be restored on the condition that Columbia undertake nine steps, including placing an academic department in “receivership” for five years, and down to requiring that masked students display their college ID on their clothing. These demands were made, per the government, due to Columbia’s failure to protect students and faculty from antisemitic violence and harassment.

The U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights sent letters to 60 higher education institutions on March 10 demanding that they take specific steps to address antisemitism on campus. It cited Title VI of the Civil Rights Act.  I note that the government has not – yet – demanded that colleges submit information on students and faculty.  The demands on Colombia indicate the degree to which the government feels ready to bring higher education institutions into sustained micro-management..  The Department of Education, which sent the letter, referred to the suspension of grants to Columbia as a consequence of not resolving complaints of harassment.

A broader scenario is one in which the federal government seeks to uproot visages of campus-based DEI and rights of transgendered students, using the same tactics of grant withholding and demands for micro-management. A hypothetical case is one on which an athletic department of a college is attacked with a demand it be placed under receivership.

In his campaign Trump, such as in his “Agenda 47” vision, he talked about plans to  reshape university funding, compliance, and campus culture, particularly by enforcing stricter protest regulations and removing DEI-related initiatives. (Go here.)

Labor crisis in Californias farm sector

The Los Angeles Times notes that both the immigration crackdown and new tariffs are threatening produce farmers in California:

“The administration’s vows of mass raids targeting undocumented immigrants, combined with its new tariff-induced trade wars, have farmers and labor groups united behind the need for legislation that ensures the U.S. continues producing an ample food supply and has sufficient workers to tend its crops.”

The administration’s approach to immigration appears to be comprehensive against all immigration perhaps with the exception of skilled workers.

The three largest California counties in terms of dollar value of farm production – Kern, Fresno, and Tulare, which produce half of the state’s farm output – have workforces which are 75% foreign born. Diary:  more than 50% foreign born; Grapes: 70% foreign born; Almonds: 70% foreign-born; Strawberries: 70% foreign born; Cattle: over 50% foreign born (go here).

We need some one to report on ICE enforcement on a regular basis

By now, some one, such as the National Immigration Forum and Congresswoman Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez, should step forward and serve centrally to collect, assess and report on ICE and other immigration law enforcement actions on a weekly basis. Uncollated anecdotal reporting is not enough. Unanalyzed raw data such as from the estimable TRAC system is not enough. We need to know patterns of arrests, detentions and deportations; organized responses by immigrant support groups, sponsors of temporary humanitarian visa holders, and state and local governments.  A comprehensive regular reporting system is overdue.