Tue, 21-Oct-2025

Dozens escape Mexican jail in brutal attack

Jailed

The savage assault in Ciudad Juarez resulted in ten deaths. 24 prisoners escaped, according to police. One woman reported that the attackers were all in black. Numerous prisoners have escaped from a prison in northern Mexico after gunmen who are thought to be drug cartel members opened fire on the institution. Authorities said that just … Read more

US Supreme Court Signals Biden to end Trump-era immigration rule

US Supreme Court
  • The US Supreme Court upholds President Joe Biden’s administration’s decision to end the “Remain in Mexico” policy.
  • The ruling was split 5-4, with Chief Justice John Roberts and the court’s three liberal justices in the majority.
  • Advocates for migrants said the policy exposed asylum-seekers to dangerous conditions in Mexico.

 

The US Supreme Court gave President Joe Biden’s administration the go-ahead on Thursday to end Donald Trump’s so-called “Remain in Mexico” policy as part of his hardline immigration stance.

Instead of being detained or provisionally released, some non-Mexicans who crossed the southern border illegally were sent back to Mexico to await the outcome of their immigration cases in court.

Since the beginning of his term, Biden has been trying to wind down the policy as part of what he claims is a more humane take on immigration.

Advocates for migrants said the policy exposed asylum-seekers to dangerous conditions in Mexico as overwhelmed US courts slowly work through a backlog of cases.

Thursday’s ruling in favor of the Biden administration was split 5-4, with Chief Justice John Roberts joining fellow conservative Brett Kavanaugh and the court’s three liberal justices in the majority.

Roberts, who authored the majority opinion, argued that federal immigration law allows the executive branch to return asylum seekers to Mexico, but does not force it to do so.

“Congress conferred contiguous-territory return authority in expressly discretionary terms,” the opinion states.

Biden’s attempt to terminate the policy, instituted by Trump in 2019, was challenged by a group of Republican-governed states led by Texas.

These states argued that his move violated US immigration law by forcing authorities to release migrants they had detained onto US territory. They also said that Biden officials had not followed proper administrative procedure.

A lower court in August 2021 ruled against the Biden administration and the case eventually ended up before the nation’s highest court.

At first, the Supreme Court simply refused to freeze the lower court ruling, forcing the administration to restart the policy, formally called Migration Protection Protocols (MPP), while it pressed ahead with its appeal.

From the start of the policy in January 2019 until its suspension under Biden, nearly 70,000 people were sent back to Mexico, according to the American Immigration Council.

During Biden’s tenure as president, more than 200,000 people attempting to enter the country illegally have been interdicted at the border each month and sent back, under MPP or a separate Covid-related policy blocking people at the border.

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