Up First from NPR - Alien Enemies Act, Legal US Immigrants Denied Entry, Deadly Storm System
Episode Date: March 17, 2025The Trump Administration invoked a wartime law called the Alien Enemies Act to deport hundreds of Venezuelans accused of being gang members, several legal immigrants living in the US were denied reent...ry into the country, and a powerful storm system killed dozens in the Midwest and South.Want more comprehensive analysis of the most important news of the day, plus a little fun? Subscribe to the Up First newsletter.Today's episode of Up First was edited by Kevin Drew, Luis Clemons, Alice Woelfle and Janaya Williams. It was produced by Ziad Buchh, Destinee Adams, Zachary Coleman and Christopher Thomas. We get engineering support from Stacey Abbott. And our technical director is David Greenburg. Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Discussion (0)
Hello.
Now, A. Martinez is ignoring me.
Do I have to hear her?
You're so mean.
A deadly storm system has moved offshore after tearing through the Midwest and South over
the weekend.
Dozens of people died when tornadoes and high winds knocked out power and leveled homes
and buildings.
What will recovery look like?
I'm Leila Fadl with A. Martinez and this is Up First from NPR News.
The Trump administration deports hundreds of people who they accuse of being
Venezuelan gang members using an obscure wartime law.
Civil Liberties advocates are raising a red flag.
It has never in our country's history been used during peacetime, much less against the
gang.
A judge ordered the deportations to be stopped immediately, but some still happened.
Why?
And two people living in the U.S. legally say they were detained and mistreated by U.S.
immigration officials when they tried to re-enter the country.
Stay with us.
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The Trump administration has deported hundreds of people who it accuses of being Venezuelan
gang members.
This weekend, they were flown not to Venezuela, but to El Salvador.
In an extraordinary move, President Trump relied on a rarely used law from more than
200 years ago to quickly expel them without hearings or due process.
A federal judge is trying to stop this.
We're joined now by NPR's Adrienne Florido.
So let's start off with what the Trump administration used to justify their actions.
Well, on Saturday, a President Trump invoked the Alien Enemies Act.
It is a law from 1798 that authorizes summarily detaining or deporting citizens of an enemy
nation.
This is a wartime law.
We are not at war with Venezuela, but in his order, Trump described Venezuela's Trinidad
Agua prison gang as a force invading the US.
And hours later, hundreds of immigrants
his administration claims are in that gang
had been deported to El Salvador.
Here's White House press secretary,
Carolyn Lovett on Fox News.
The president invoked this authority
to deport nearly 300 of them who are now in El Salvador,
where they will be behind bars where they belong,
rather than roaming freely in American communities.
El Salvador's president, Nayib Bukele, said that he would lock them up for a year and
he released photos of shackled men being unloaded from planes and having their heads shaved.
The ACLU sued to stop these deportations and a federal judge agreed to temporarily block
them, but what happened?
Yeah, it was an emergency suit from the ACLU on Saturday and Judge James Boesberg of the Federal District Court in DC said that he didn't think the Alien Enemies Act authorized
the immediate deportations.
He told the government to turn back any planes that might already be in the air, but that
didn't happen, and it's not clear if the planes had already landed in El Salvador or if officials
chose not to divert them back to the US.
El Salvador's president, who takes pride in flouting due process in his crime crackdowns,
mocked the judge's order on social media writing, oopsie, too late.
Venezuela does not regularly accept deportation flights from the USA, so Bukele said that
he had struck a deal with the U.S. to imprison these deportees for a fee.
And tell us more about the concerns civil liberties advocates are raising over the president's
use of this law.
Well, the Alien Enemies Act has only been used three times before, the last time during
World War II when the government used it to detain Japanese, German, and Italian citizens.
Legal learned the ACLU's attorney in this lawsuit told NPR Trump is misusing the law.
The Alien Enemies Act cannot be used during peacetime for regular immigration enforcement.
Congress was very clear in the statute that it can only be used against a foreign government
or foreign nation.
It has never in our country's history been used during peacetime, much less against the
gang.
He says the ACLU acted fast because once the US has turned someone over to a foreign government,
federal courts lose jurisdiction.
A judge can't order El Salvador to send people back.
Now the people who were deported, who the Trump administration claims are gang members,
do we really know if they are Tren de Arragua members?
We don't know who most of them are.
The Trump administration hasn't named them, hasn't offered evidence to back up its claim.
Since yesterday, some families of men
who were in immigration detention in the US
have spoken out to say they fear their loved ones may
have been in this group and that they are not gang members.
So what happens now?
Well, the Trump administration has appealed.
The judges ordered temporarily blocking deportations
under the law.
The ACLU says it'll fight this vigorously.
They insist there is huge danger in allowing the president to invoke wartime authorities during peacetime
that it sets a dangerous precedent.
All right. That's NPR's Adrian Florido. Thanks a lot.
Thank you, A.
A federal judge in Boston has scheduled a hearing this morning about what he calls serious
allegations that customs and border protection officials disobeyed his court order.
A doctor who was legally working in the U.S. has been sent back to Lebanon, and in a separate
case a German-born green card holder is being detained.
And that's raising concerns about an immigration crackdown in Boston.
NPR's Tovia Smith has been following the story.
So first bring us up to date on the case of the doctor who was returned to Lebanon, whose
case is being heard in court this morning.
Yeah, this is about Rasha Allouey, a kidney transplant doctor at a Brown University affiliated
medical group.
She was here on an H-1B visa, that's the one meant for highly specialized workers, and
she went to visit family in Lebanon and when she returned she was detained for 36 hours at Boston's Logan
Airport and she had her phone taken from her according to her cousin.
Her cousin is the one who got the federal court order barring officials from sending
her back.
Apparently, even her lawyers made a frantic call to the airport control tower trying to
stop the plane she was on,
but they say officials quote, willfully disobeyed the judge's order and sent her back anyway.
And we expect to learn more shortly when government officials appear in court this morning.
But so far, we got just a preview from a spokesperson who said that
officials use rigorous screening to keep threats out of the country is how they put it.
Okay, so now the separate case of the German-born green card holder.
That's a different situation?
Yeah, in this case, Fabian Schmidt was detained for days when he tried to return to Logan
Airport from a trip to Europe, according to his family.
And officials suggest it's because he faced misdemeanor drug and DUI charges about a decade
ago and he was a no-show for
Court hearing on his case his family says that's because he never got the notice
But in this case also relatives say that Schmidt was mistreated in custody
Violently interrogated was how his mother put it when she spoke to GBH reporter Sarah Bettencourt
He had to go and be stripped naked and was
showered by two officers with ice cold water. One was interrogated again. Officials say the
claims are quote blatantly false without however saying specifically which claims and they add
quote when an individual is found with drug related charges and and tries to reenter the country, officers will take proper action," they said. And, Tobia, all this comes as the Trump
administration has been promising to take a hard line on immigration in
general. What kind of reaction are you seeing to all this in Boston? Yeah, this is
being seen as Trump making good on one of his central campaign promises or
threats, however you see it. And this was reiterated, by the way, by Border Czar Tom Homan just a few weeks ago when he
specifically called out Boston for vowing to not help ICE enforcement officers.
I'm coming to Boston.
I'm bringing hell with me.
Meantime, those who oppose the Trump administration's hardline stance are also fired up.
There's a protest planned for this evening to support the doctor who was sent back to Lebanon.
As of course, there have been other protests,
including many around the nation this weekend
in support of the Columbia student, Mahmoud Khalil.
He was taken into custody by officials who say
his campus protest activities basically amount
to a national security threat because they quote
Align with Hamas, which is a us designated terrorist group. All right, that's mpr's tovia smith tovia. Thanks. Thank you
At least three dozen people are dead after severe weather sparked tornadoes, dust storms,
wildfires and heavy rainfall across the south and midwest over the weekend.
The storms continue to rattle the east coast overnight but have largely moved offshore.
Residents across the country are still taking stock of the damage.
NPR's Rylan Barton has been following this, so tell us what happened over the weekend.
Yeah, so this really volatile storm system affected a huge swath of the country.
It created a trail of destruction from Kansas and Oklahoma down to Texas and then over east
to Missouri, Arkansas and Mississippi.
In the east side, on Friday and Saturday, the system dropped baseball-sized hail in
some places, produced dozens of deadly tornadoes.
Mississippi Governor Tate Reeves
said that six people were killed in tornadoes there. Speaking on Sunday, he promised a quick
response. Mississippians in times like these step up and do what is necessary to take care of our
friends and our neighbors. And that makes me proud to be a Mississippian. Also, 12 people died in Missouri,
where Governor Mike Cahoe said yesterday
that hundreds of homes, schools, and businesses
were destroyed or severely damaged.
In Arkansas, the National Weather Service
said that damage from two of the tornadoes there
showed they were likely F4s.
That's the second strongest class of tornadoes,
with one of them estimated to have a peak wind
of 170 miles an hour.
The last time that happened on the same day in the state was 1997.
First responders across the region are still working to clear debris, restore power to
homes and eventually distribute supplies for recovery.
Yeah, now tell us about the high wind and wildfires that took place on the western side
of the area affected by the storm.
Right, so Oklahoma, Kansas and Texas, there were hurricane force winds. They created dust storms and wildfires. On Friday, eight people died
in a 71 vehicle pileup in Kansas. It was after a dust storm suddenly reduced visibility to near zero.
That closed interstate 70 for over 24 hours. Another three people were killed in a dust storm
related crashes in Amarillo in
the Texas Panhandle. In Oklahoma, Governor Kevin Stitt said that high winds stoked more
than 130 fires across the state, killing four and damaging or destroying nearly 400 homes.
And in Texas on Sunday, officials say there's more than 42,000 acres were burning from 36
different wildfires, including a nearly 10,000 acre
wildfire near Fredericksburg in central Texas. The threat of fires is expected to continue
there into the next week.
Wow. So that's all of that's a lot. What does recovery look like?
So the process is really just starting. President Trump said on his Truth Social account yesterday
that he's monitoring the storm damage and that he and First Lady Melania Trump are praying
for everyone impacted.
He promised to assist state and local officials in the recovery and he said National Guard troops
were already deployed to Arkansas where the most powerful tornadoes took place. Governor
Sarah Huckabee Sanders surveyed damage there Saturday. Our goal is to help and aid the local
folks on the ground, take care of people, we'll worry about the
paperwork later.
This is just the beginning of tornado season and more severe weather could be on its way
in the next several weeks.
That's NPR's Rylan Barton.
Rylan, thanks.
Thank you.
And that's Up First for Monday, March 17th.
I'm Amie Martinez.
And I'm Laila Faldana.
Thanks for listening to Up First.
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Today's episode of Up First was edited by Kevin Drew,
Louise Clemens, Alice Wolfley, and Janaya Williams.
It was produced by Zia Butch, Destiny Adams, Zachary Coleman, and Christopher Thomas.
We get engineering support from Stacey Abbott.
Our technical director is David Greenberg.
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