Latest news with #UnitedStatesNaval
Yahoo
3 days ago
- Politics
- Yahoo
Tacoma man held in East Africa part of latest Trump fight over deportations
A Tacoma man is among a group of men convicted of serious crimes that President Donald Trump's administration is trying to send to South Sudan as part of Trump's ongoing effort to deport undocumented immigrants. Lawyers for 43-year-old Tuan Phan learned this week that he and eight other men are being held in a converted shipping container in leg shackles at a United States Naval base in Djibouti in East Africa. The men were routed there following a May 20 deportation flight from Texas after a federal judge in Boston intervened. Judge Brian Murphy found that the Department of Homeland Security had violated a court order by failing to provide the men a meaningful opportunity to assert any fears they had about being deported to a country not listed on their removal orders. Murphy said the U.S. Department of State has a 'do not travel' advisory for South Sudan due to crime, kidnapping and armed conflict. Conditions at the U.S. military base in Djibouti are also dangerous. In a sworn declaration filed Thursday, a DHS official said Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers were warned when they arrived of the imminent danger of rocket attacks from terrorist groups in Yemen. Officers and detainees have felt ill, the official said, noting that smog clouds from nearby burn pits disposing of trash and human waste made it difficult to breathe. In news releases about the deportations, DHS said the flights to South Sudan were to remove some of the 'most barbaric, violent individuals illegally in the United States.' DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said Murphy's ruling that halted their removal was 'deranged.' Unlike the deportations of more than a hundred Venezuelans to El Salvador earlier this year, who according to the New York Times, mostly had no criminal records, each of the eight men in this case have been convicted of violent crimes. An attorney for Phan with the Northwest Immigrant Rights Project, Glenda Aldana Madrid, said Phan and his wife, Ngoc, had been preparing for his deportation, but they had been planning for him to be removed to Vietnam, where he emigrated from as a child in 1991. The two met in Tacoma as neighbors. Phan had legal permanent status, but his legal status was revoked after he was convicted of first-degree murder and second-degree assault in 2001. According to Pierce County court records, Phan, then 18, fatally shot 19-year-old Michael Holtmeyer and wounded his friend near Les Davis Pier on Ruston Way. Holtmeyer was an innocent passerby, and prosecutors said Phan shot into a crowd because he was angry that rival gang members were harassing his friends. Phan pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 22 years in prison. According to the DHS, he was issued a final order of removal in 2009. Some countries don't accept deportation flights. Vietnam has previously accepted deportations for immigrants who entered the United States before 1995, according to the Asian Law Caucus. Ngoc Phan was able to talk with her husband for a few minutes Wednesday after not hearing from him for two weeks. 'It was a relief to know that he is safe and alive, but it was extremely upsetting to know that he's chained by the feet like an animal, living in a shipping container, and without proper medication,' Ngoc Phan said in a written statement. The U.S. government has the authority to deport people to a third country — one other than the country designated by an immigration judge — according to Trina Realmuto, executive director of the National Immigration Litigation Alliance. But Realmuto said the court's order was that if that's going to happen, attorneys have to be given sufficient time to investigate whether their clients have a fear of being deported there. In this case, Realmuto told The News Tribune on Friday, there was less than 16 hours notice before the men were brought to an airport facility in Texas and put on a plane. Realmuto's organization is part of the ongoing lawsuit over the men's deportations. She said she thinks the effort to send them to South Sudan is 'fear mongering.' 'The effort is punitive, but it is meant to incite fear in the United States,' Realmuto said. U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, also Trump's chief foreign affairs advisor, wrote in a declaration in the case that Murphy's court order had interfered with quiet efforts to rebuild a working relationship with the government in South Sudan's capital, Juda. 'Before the court's intervention, the government in South Sudan, which previously refused to accept the return of one of its own nationals, had taken steps to work more cooperatively with the U.S. government,' Rubio said. Rubio added that cooperation between South Sudan and the U.S. was critical both in terms of removals and to advance the U.S. government's humanitarian efforts in the country.


Fox News
17-03-2025
- Politics
- Fox News
Sec. Marco Rubio: 'High Fidelity of Confidence' That Deported Individuals Are Known Criminals
Marco Rubio, the 72nd United States Secretary of State and former Senator from Florida, joined The Guy Benson Show to discuss why the U.S. is targeting Houthi militants in Yemen and why he believes it's in America's best interest. Sec. Rubio also explained why the war between Russia and Ukraine is closer to its conclusion than in years past under the Biden administration. Rubio responded to critics questioning whether a recent deportation flight of Venezuelans included gang members, emphasizing that all those deported were in the country illegally, and he also slammed district judges who attempted to block said flights, showing that they prioritize the rights of illegal criminals over everyday Americans. You can listen to the full interview below! Listen to the full interview: Watch the full interview: Listen to the full podcast: Read the full transcript below: GUY BENSON, HOST, 'THE GUY BENSON SHOW': Well, it's my honor to welcome back to the show for the first time in his new capacity Marco Rubio, who is now the secretary of state of the United States of America, of course, a longtime U.S. senator from the great state of Florida. Secretary Rubio, welcome back. It's great to have you here. MARCO RUBIO, U.S. SECRETARY OF STATE: Thanks for having me on. It's good to be with you in this new role. BENSON: I saw a report out of the Pentagon just minutes ago that day three of U.S. strikes against the Houthi terrorists in Yemen now under way. I have seen some talk and chatter online from certain precincts wondering, why are we bombing Yemen? Is this in our vital national interest to be engaged in this? I think the answer is yes. Obviously, the president fully agrees and has issued these orders. From the Trump administration, U.S. perspective, Secretary, why is this the correct course of action against the Houthis? RUBIO: Well, first of all, it's wrong to think about it as we're bombing Yemen. We're bombing the Houthis. And they happen to be located in Yemen. They have taken control of parts of the territory of Yemen. They claim to be the government, but they really aren't. It's basically a terrorist organization that over the last 18 months has attacked United States Naval vessels 174 times. So I would ask anyone who says what you just said, who raises that point, if we get attacked 174 times by any group in the world, what should our response to that be? I ask anybody, if you get attacked, our Naval ships, 174 times, commercial vessels, all these things that people like to buy, whether you're ordering it on Amazon or buying it from a store or a product that you need, or maybe you're in a business that relies on these things for sales, they all come on cargo ships. They have been attacked 100 — close to 150 times in the last 18 months. So what do you do with a group that attacks your Navy 174 times or this group that attacks commercial shipping 150 times? You just leave them there? You let them keep attacking? You go ahead and say, OK, well, I guess we just can't ship through there anymore because these guys are there? No, I think the answer, everyone would say, is, you got to take them out. And that's what we're doing. We're going after their ability to attack our Navy ships and their ability to attack our commercial shipping, period. That's what we're doing. We're doing the world a favor by doing that, because it's not just our ships that they're attacking, but they're attacking us more than anybody else. BENSON: Yes. No, I think it's clearly in our interest, but also the interests of the world and open trade and lowering costs of the goods that gets driven up if you have to ship around the Horn of Africa. So the reasons are plenty. And I'm glad that this is finally happening. I think it's really delayed from the Biden administration. Now you guys are getting down to business and doing what should have been done a while ago. There's also a message here, not just indirectly, but, as of today, also directly from President Trump to the Iranian patrons of the Houthis. Talk about that message as well. RUBIO: Well, the Houthis don't exist — I mean, first of all, the Houthis don't have the ability to do this without Iran helping them,OK? They don't — they don't — I mean, they have — they have learned how to make them, these drones and these sophisticated anti-ship drones. But this technology is coming from somewhere. Iran is helping them. Iran is helping them make these things. Iran is providing them the money to do these things. Iran is providing them with targeting information that they can use against us. I mean, without Iran, there is no Houthi threat of this magnitude. I mean, there's a Houthi threat inside of Yemen, but not a Houthi threat against our Navy and against commercial shipping. So, Iran owns this problem. And they created this Frankenstein monster. And now they got our own it. And I think we should hold them responsible. And that's — the president has said, if these guys keep doing this, we owe Iran responsible for having created it. So I think that's the second point that I would make. I wouldn't go any further than what the president said today, but he's very serious about it. And I was — I was actually with him when he put that message out. He's very serious about it because he knows, unlike Joe Biden, that this is a group that was allowed to grow into the threat they become because the Biden administration didn't do anything about it. BENSON: You have been intimately involved in trying to pursue President Trump's stated goal of ending Russia's war against Ukraine in a way that is sustainable. It seems to me at least that the Ukrainians have taken a number of constructive steps now toward peace in a war where they have been victimized. You have got the aggressors, the Russians. They're willing to talk. I know you have had U.S. delegations sitting across from the Russians. There's a phone call coming up between President Trump and Putin as well. Have you seen meaningful movement yet, to your satisfaction, from the Russian side of this? RUBIO: Well, I don't think there's been movement to our satisfaction from anybody yet. I think what we have seen is that we're closer. We're not close to peace. I mean, I think there's a lot to be worked on, but we're closer than we were two weeks ago. We're closer than we were six months ago. This war is going on three years. And the president wants it to end. I think everyone should agree that this war needs to end. And the question is, how do you end it in a way that it doesn't restart again? So the plan basically was, can we get these guys to stop shooting at each other and sit down and have a negotiation over how to end it permanently? That's been the president's goal. We got a good commitment from Ukraine last week in Saudi Arabia. I went there. I met with them. They agreed to stop shooting and freeze everything where it is, and we can get to talking about how to end this permanently. And now we got to get something like that from the Russians. So there's been good meetings. Ambassador Steve Witkoff, the special envoy, met with Putin himself last week, had a productive meeting. It wasn't a waste of time, came back with some information. We will know more tomorrow after the president speaks to Putin, and hopefully we will be in a better place. But I think the president needs to — President Trump needs to be applauded for trying to find peace. And, look, he's the only leader in the world right now that can do this. The Chinese can't do this, the Europeans. The only leader in the world right now that has any chance at all of bringing this thing to an end is President Trump. And I think he needs to be applauded for even putting so much time and effort and dedicating so much attention to it. BENSON: Here on the home front, Secretary Rubio, there's been a real point of emphasis from the Trump administration on protecting the American people from dangerous foreign gangs. We have seen a lot of that infiltration over the course of a four-year border crisis that has finally been put to an end by President Trump. But there's still a lot of bad people here who came here illegally. And there's this process to remove a lot of them from the country. And that's causing, as you know, some controversy. There was this deportation, a series of flights of alleged Tren de Aragua gang members, that a judge ordered those flights to basically turn around. And the administration said, nope, in international waters, out of U.S. airspace already, that doesn't apply. That might get fought out in courts and appealed further. I'd imagine that issue isn't over. But some of those alleged Tren de Aragua gang members are now in prisons in El Salvador. I have seen some concern expressed that there is not concrete evidence that all of the people who were deported to those Salvadoran prisons are confirmed members of Tren de Aragua and there's no recourse if someone was incorrectly swept up, and that there's no due process for someone who might want to appeal that. What's your response to that? Is that a legitimate concern? RUBIO: Well, first of all, I would say that every single person that was on that plane was in the country illegally, one way or the other, in terms of the Venezuelans and the alleged — the Tren de Aragua guys. So what was on that plane was MS-13, identified MS-13 criminals, wanted for crimes in El Salvador, where they came from. And when I met with President Bukele, he has a list of people he wants to put on trial in his country for committing crimes over there. And he's got a very safe and good prison system. So we sent them on that plane. And then there were these people. Look, we have local intelligence authorities, police departments, FBI, others, that have spent now the better part of the year assembling a roster of known gang members, the people they know are part of Tren de Aragua. And so these people were part of that list. Now, assuming — let's just assume, and I'm not saying this is the case, because I think there's high fidelity and confidence that in fact that's exactly what every single one of them was. But if one of them turns out not to be, then they're just illegally in our country, and the Salvadorans can then deport them from — to Venezuela, but they weren't supposed to be in our country to begin with. They were here illegally. They were all here illegally with all the people that they're on that list. Important thing to note here is, we — our country was flooded with the — this is one of the most dangerous gangs. And I say gangs. It's really a terrorist organization. They have been designated as such. I designated them terrorists, at the president's orders, and rightfully so. We have been asking for the stuff for over a year. This is one of the most dangerous groups that's ever been operating inside the United States of America, incredibly well-organized, violent, I mean, unbelievably violent. When some of them were at the Guantanamo on their way to deportation, the military guards that were watching them were like, these are the worst people we have ever interacted with. It's a prison gang that broke out of Venezuela, flooded into our country, were flooded into our country by the Venezuelan regime. And we got to get them out of our country. And they really should be going to Venezuela. Venezuela should be taking them, but they refuse to take them. And so we are fortunate to have a friend like President Bukele, who as part of my meeting with him said we will take them for a fraction of what it cost you guys to house them in your own prison system. But these people need to be out of our country. These are people that are responsible for kidnappings, rapes, extortion, murders. And some of it — it is the single most dangerous — it's an enemy alien — an alien enemy group, I mean, that has infiltrated our country and is waging war on the United States of America. And there's a lot of evidence that these groups were allowed to operate and grow by the regime in Venezuela, which I guarantee you has no problem pushing them towards the United States to undermine us here, because they don't them in their country doing these things. So I think it was a great move by the president. And I think it was a very helpful thing that El Salvador did for us and President Bukele. And we're grateful to him for it. And, frankly, I feel like we should continue to do it. BENSON: And the judge who said these had to stop and the administration saying, well, it actually doesn't apply, do you expect that to be appealed? RUBIO: Oh, yes, it already has been appealed, and because, I mean, first of all, we're talking about an operation here that involves the Department of Defense, because these are alien enemies, and then been declared as such by the president. Second, look, obviously, others will be more aware of sort of like where the planes were and the logistics of it, but I think there's a fundamental question to ask here, and that is, how can a judge sitting in Washington, D.C., have jurisdiction over three planes full of the criminals flying over the Gulf of America? We have really gotten out of control here, where we have these judges, district judges anywhere in the country — you can find a district judge. All you have to do is go find a judge anywhere in America to issue these orders that apply nationally. But when those orders touch on the president's right to set foreign policy, which is what this was in many ways, this is foreign policy, this is national security, you have got a big problem. You have got courts here that basically are completely out of control. And can you imagine if those planes had turned around and come back? And you know what else is ironic to me? We have courts out there that had no problem, no problem with people being fired from the military, fired from their jobs for not getting vaccinated. They had no problem with that. They had no problem with cities and counties and local governments telling churches, you cannot meet during the pandemic. You cannot exercise your religious liberties. But they will go bend over backwards to bring back and secure the alleged right of rapists and kidnappers and extortionists and dangerous enemies of the United States. It's unbelievable to me, unbelievable. BENSON: Yes, it's like kind of the Johnny-come-latelys as well on free speech, where they're trying to frame some of these deportations of Hamas supporters. They're saying, oh, well, this is punishing speech, when they have never seemed to have any interest in free speech for American citizens. But, in this case, they're ignoring the criminal behavior of these people to try to turn it into a speech issue. I know that you have been on fire on that issue in the interviews that I have seen. I do want to ask you. We only have a minute left together with you, Secretary Rubio. You just came back from Canada. You were up there for the G7 meetings. How was your reception in Canada, given the strains between our countries right now, the 51st state trolling, all of that? How did that go for you as a representative of the United States and the Trump administration? RUBIO: Well, it went fine. I mean, first of all, it was a G7 gathering, so it wasn't about the Canada issue. It just happened to be hosted by Canada in sort of a remote location or what have you. And, certainly, it came up. And I think, sometimes, it's dominating their news. And at the end of the day, it is what it is. But, ultimately, I mean, we had a lot of other issues to talk about of great importance. I mean, we're aware of it. I mean, you — it dominates the Canadian news. It's like the only thing they talk about is this thing. But, at the end of the day, when it comes to the trade piece of it, this is — ultimately, it's not about Canada, it's not about Mexico, it's not about the European Union. It's about everybody. The president rightfully states that the state of global trade is completely unfair to America, completely unfair. So I get why all these countries are unhappy, because they got a great deal going on and they want to keep it going. The president says, no, we're going to reset the baseline, the baseline of trade, so that it's fair. Everyone, what you charge us, we're going to charge you. And then we can negotiate. Countries that want to can negotiate with us on a one-on-one, bilateral basis, to see if we can come up with trade deals with them that are fair to both sides. But we have to negotiate from a new status quo. We can't negotiate from an old status — the existing status quo, which is completely — well, why would any of these countries negotiate with us new trade deals if the one they have now is unfair and benefits them? Why would they give that up? BENSON: Marco Rubio is the 72nd secretary of state of the United States of America. He's our guest here on 'The Guy Benson Show.' Secretary Rubio, thank you so much for your time. We look forward to chatting again. RUBIO: Absolutely. Thank you. BENSON: That's Secretary Marco Rubio on 'The Guy Benson Show.'