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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsTrump asks the Supreme Court to neutralize the Convention Against Torture
Trumps lawyers claim theyve found a loophole that will allow Trump to ship immigrants overseas to be tortured.
Trump asks the Supreme Court to neutralize the Convention Against Torture www.vox.com/scotus/41616...
— Ian Millhiser (@imillhiser.bsky.social) 2025-06-09T22:49:49.676Z
https://www.vox.com/scotus/416163/trump-supreme-court-deport-immigration-convention-torture
Federal law states that the United States shall not expel, extradite, or otherwise effect the involuntary return of any person to a country in which there are substantial grounds for believing the person would be in danger of being subjected to torture. This law implements a treaty, known as the Convention Against Torture, which the United States ratified more than three decades ago.
Federal regulations, moreover, provide that even after an immigration judge has determined that a noncitizen may be deported to another country, that judges order shall not be executed in circumstances that would violate Article 3 of the United Nations Convention Against Torture. And those regulations also establish a process that immigrants can use to raise concerns with an immigration judge that they may be tortured if sent to a specific country.
The Trump administration, however, claims it has discovered a loophole that renders all of these legal protections worthless, and is now asking the Supreme Court to explicitly give it the authority to make use of that loophole in order to enact its immigration policies.
According to President Donald Trumps lawyers, the administration can simply wait until after an immigration judge has conducted the proceeding that ordinarily would determine whether a particular noncitizen may be deported to a particular country, and then, if that noncitizen is allowed to be deported, announce that the immigrant will be deported to some previously unmentioned country even if that immigrant reasonably fears they will be tortured in that nation.
Department of Homeland Security v. D.V.D., the case where the Trump administration asks the justices to neutralize the Convention Against Torture, is unlike some of the more high-profile deportation cases that reached the Supreme Court such as the unlawful deportation of Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia to El Salvador in that no one really questions that the immigrants at the heart of this case may be deported somewhere.
Federal regulations, moreover, provide that even after an immigration judge has determined that a noncitizen may be deported to another country, that judges order shall not be executed in circumstances that would violate Article 3 of the United Nations Convention Against Torture. And those regulations also establish a process that immigrants can use to raise concerns with an immigration judge that they may be tortured if sent to a specific country.
The Trump administration, however, claims it has discovered a loophole that renders all of these legal protections worthless, and is now asking the Supreme Court to explicitly give it the authority to make use of that loophole in order to enact its immigration policies.
According to President Donald Trumps lawyers, the administration can simply wait until after an immigration judge has conducted the proceeding that ordinarily would determine whether a particular noncitizen may be deported to a particular country, and then, if that noncitizen is allowed to be deported, announce that the immigrant will be deported to some previously unmentioned country even if that immigrant reasonably fears they will be tortured in that nation.
Department of Homeland Security v. D.V.D., the case where the Trump administration asks the justices to neutralize the Convention Against Torture, is unlike some of the more high-profile deportation cases that reached the Supreme Court such as the unlawful deportation of Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia to El Salvador in that no one really questions that the immigrants at the heart of this case may be deported somewhere.
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Trump asks the Supreme Court to neutralize the Convention Against Torture (Original Post)
LetMyPeopleVote
Monday
OP
BOSSHOG
(42,706 posts)1. Hey, finally something MAGAs voted FOR
hlthe2b
(110,152 posts)2. JHC!! Not only are Trump, Miller, Bondi, Noem, Vance et al MONSTERS, but his lawyers too. They OWN this
for making the argument. No doubt this will titillate Thomas & Alito's inner sadistic fever dreams, but will the rest be so horrific?
sinkingfeeling
(55,440 posts)3. I'm sure the vote for this will be 6-3 to grant the a**hole's wishes.
Grolph_
(138 posts)4. Pro-Torture?????
we're fucked
House of Roberts
(6,054 posts)5. Have they got John Yoo working for them now?

Wingus Dingus
(9,077 posts)6. Psychopaths.