Look at the deportees on the plane that directed us to southern Sudan

Foreign men convicted of crimes dedicated to a deportation flight directed at the chaotic southern Sudan nation were derived from countries to Vietnam. They lived in various places from California to Ajova, Nebraska to Florida, and one – almost 30 years.

They were accused and convicted of crimes, ranging from murder, rape, robbery and attack.

Despite their criminal record, the Federal Judge says the White House court ruling violated the court’s ruling to third parties by adding these eight migrants on the aircraft migrants did not give a meaningful opportunity to contradict that they could be at risk.

Judge Brian E. Murphy Boston ordered a new interview with migrants in the US or abroad. Trump’s administration officers accused the “activists’ judges” to advocate the release of dangerous criminals.

“No country wanted to accept them on earth because their crimes are so uniquely monster and barbaric,” said Tricia McLaughlin, a spokeswoman for the Homeland Security Department.

At least one of the victim’s family members appeared to resist how the deportation was carried out and that her family was not informed, and saying that she had long hoped that her husband would leave the United States.

These are migrants who were part of the flight to deportation.

South Sudan: Dian Peter Domach

The only man from South Sudan was 33 -year -old Dian Peter Domach. 2013 He was convicted of a robbery for which he was sentenced to 8 to 14 years in prison; and the prohibited person to whom he has been convicted of 6 to 10 years has a deadly weapon. Those sentences had to be given one by one. The Homeland Security Department said Domach was also convicted of driving under the influence.

While in prison, he was convicted of a “closed person’s attack” and sentenced to an additional 18-20 months. According to the Department of the Nebraska Correctional Services, Domach was released on “Discretized Launch” on May 2. And after six days, he detained the immigration authorities.

The records argued that he represented the appeal and in the latest prison attack case.

Loos: Thingxay shaveutut

One of the two exile punishments to life is 48-year-old Thongxay Nilakout from Laos. He was convicted of killing a German woman and injuring her husband in 1994 when he was 17. The couple visited the popular tourist gaze east of Los Angeles to see their daughter.

Nilakout was sentenced to life prison, but was released in 2023. After his case was reviewed after the US Supreme Court ruling that the aforementioned compulsory punishment of life for minors was unconstitutional. Nilakout to Laos was told by an immigration judge in 2023. To remove and refused the appeal, the court’s records show.

The daughter of the couple Birte Pfleger is now a professor of history in Los Angeles in California, California. She called it a “true moral dilemma,” explaining that she was not satisfied with the way deportation was carried out.

“No matter what path you cut it, you cannot violate the proper human process. This is the main constitutional law that has existed for over 250 years,” she said.

But she hopes the man decides voluntarily to return to Laos. Pfleger said he had completed the forms she needed to report any changes to the Nilakout case, but not reported when January. Immigration authorities arrested the man or when he was released on a flight.

“He allegedly had plans because he still has several relatives in Laos,” she said. “Well, guess what? Now it’s time. Go call those loved ones. Go home. Don’t come back.”

Myanmar: Kyaw Mya

According to the Homeland Security Department, Kyaw Mya, a Myanmar man who lived in Ajova, was convicted of sexual harassment at 12 years and sentenced to 10 years in prison.

2021 Immigration Judge MyA has been appointed and lost appeal against this order in 2023, according to Marcos Charles, an assistant assistant in the field of outdoor operations with US immigration and customs authorities, in a court report in the court. February He was seized by the implementation of the US immigration and customs.

MyA lawyer did not respond to phone calls to comment.

Myanmar: Nyo Myint

Nyo Myint, another Burmese exile, lived in Lincolne, Nebraska. He was accused of 2017. A sexual assault on a 26-year-old woman with a “reduced mental capacity” that ended pregnant. The woman’s sister said the victim had a mental capacity equal to the 3-year-old, and told her that he was the father of the child.

The arrest statement submitted by the police stated that Myint confessed to having had sex at least twice with a woman, saying he had known her since 2003. And knew she had attended a school for children with mental disabilities. He confessed to making a mistake and felt it was wrong to have sex with her.

2020 He was sentenced to 12-14 years’ imprisonment, but in 2023. May Probation was published. In the same year, he was told to remove the immigration judge and refused the appeal, the court’s records show. ICE adopted myint custody in February.

Nathan Sohriakoff remembers that he defended myint in the Nebraska case and interacted with him through translators. He has not heard that he is part of the Deporte Group, which is called “barbaric monsters” by short administration officials.

“He was a little man, very small. He didn’t speak a word in English and did not resist the accusations,” Sohriakoff said. “I don’t remember it was dangerous. My overall feeling was that it was also limited because of his abilities as cognitive, but not as much as I felt he was incompetent.”

Vietnam: Tuan Thanh Phan

The Homeland Security Department says there was a Vietnamese man on the flight. Tuan Thanh Phan was convicted of first -degree murder and second -degree assault and sentenced to 22 years in prison.

Immigration judge ordered Phan to be transported to Vietnam in 2009, and he refused appeal, court records show. Earlier this month, ICE seized it.

Cuba: Enrique Arias-Hierro

The Homeland Security Department says two men from Cuba attended the flight: Enrique Arias-Hierro and Jose Manuel Rodriguez-Quinones.

The Florida Court’s records show that Arias-Hierro, who is now 46 years old, served for 15 years in a state prison after being convicted of robbery, kidnapping and falsely pretending to be an official in 2007. Homeland security officials say he was also convicted of murder and armed robbery, but records in the Miami-Dade County did not include it. Arias-Hierro already in 1999 Immigration judge has already ordered a Cuba and has not appealed, according to court records.

A lawyer who last worked as a defender of his society in 2024. Arias-Hierro took Ice this month.

Cuba: Jose Manuel Rodriguez-Quinones

Immigration officers said on Thursday that Jose Manuel Rodriguez-Quinones was sentenced to 15 years in prison for convicted of arson in 2008. In Florida.

Additional convictions for drug trafficking, being a crime with a weapon, and following the storage of drug supplies, said Charles, an ice director assistant in outdoor operations, in a statement in court. 2022 He was convicted of trying to kill first -degree murder and sentenced to four years in prison, a document shows.

The Charles Declaration did not say whether Rodriguez-Quinones had ever seen an immigration judge. It was arrested by ice last month.

Mexico: Jesus Munoz-Guutierrez

The Mexican husband was also built on a deportation flight. Immigration officials say Jesus Munoz-Guutierrez was recently “identified as a recognized member of a criminal organization”. The Homeland Security Department says that Jesus Munoz-Guutierrez was convicted of second-degree murder and sentenced to life prison.

Immigration judge told him to deport to Mexico in 2005, and Munoz-Guutierrez refused his appeal, the court’s records show.

It is unclear why it will be flown to South Sudan or beyond when Mexico is directly south of the US.

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This report was contributed to associate press writers Margery Beck Omaha, Nebraska and Rebecca Boone Boise, Aidaho.

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