
A federal judge in Texas ordered the Trump administration Monday to facilitate contact between a Venezuelan man deported to El Salvador and his lawyers, giving the federal government until Wednesday afternoon. Limited time: Save 25% on NBC News subscription Get exclusive reporting, live Q&As and ad-free reading.
Main Idea: A federal judge ordered the Trump administration to help Venezuelan deportee Widmer Josneyder Agelviz Sanguino get access to his lawyers while he is held in a prison in El Salvador.
Key Points:
The ruling may slow deportations and raise legal costs, while highlighting risks of wrongful detention and weak access to lawyers.
It could improve due process and reassure voters that courts can check executive power.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Named federal judge who issued the key order requiring access to the detainee’s attorneys.
The Venezuelan man at the center of the legal fight and detention story.
Central political actor whose administration’s deportation policy and appeal posture drive the story.
Federal agency tied to the detention and deportation decisions discussed in the article.
Country where the detainee is imprisoned and whose prison system is central to the article.
Named Homeland Security official whose department is implicated in the deportations and is quoted through the administration’s position.
Court issuing the order that is central to the article’s legal developments.
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Sign in to commentThe expected appellate venue for the administration’s challenge to the order.
Agency cited in the detention documents as the source of the tattoo-based gang-association claim.
Lawyer representing Agelviz and quoted on the court order and detention dispute.
Agelviz’s mother, quoted to support the account of his background and alleged innocence.