Invocation of the Alien Enemies Act to Accelerate Venezuelan Deportations

The administration invoked a rarely used 1798 wartime statute to justify accelerated removals of Venezuelan nationals, including transfers into El Salvador's detention system, prompting immediate litigation over both process and statutory scope.

The Trump administration invoked the Alien Enemies Act to speed removals of Venezuelan nationals accused of ties to Tren de Aragua. Courts quickly intervened, and the policy became a major test of wartime powers, due process, and third-country detention transfers.

Executive summary

What this record documents

  • The proclamation treated Tren de Aragua activity as an 'invasion' or 'predatory incursion' under the Alien Enemies Act.
  • The government used the proclamation to argue for removals with sharply reduced individualized process.
  • Public reporting connected some removals to transfers into El Salvador's CECOT prison system.

Timeline

Sequence of events

  1. White House issues Alien Enemies Act proclamation

    President Trump publicly invoked the 1798 statute against alleged Tren de Aragua members.

  2. Emergency removals and transfers begin drawing scrutiny

    Reporting and litigation described attempted removals with reduced process and transfers into El Salvador's detention system.

  3. Civil-liberties groups move into federal court

    Federal litigation quickly challenged both the legal theory behind the proclamation and the lack of individualized process.

Analysis

Reporting, legal context, and impact

What Happened

On March 15, 2025, the Trump administration invoked the Alien Enemies Act of 1798, a wartime statute rarely used in U.S. history, as part of its campaign against alleged members of Tren de Aragua. The proclamation argued that the gang's activity constituted an "invasion" or "predatory incursion" within the meaning of the statute.

The administration used that theory to argue it could remove Venezuelan nationals with sharply reduced process. Critics said the policy relied on sweeping accusations of gang affiliation and did not provide individualized hearings before some removals were attempted.

Deportation to Third Countries

Rather than returning all deportees to Venezuela, the administration also coordinated transfers to El Salvador under an agreement with President Nayib Bukele's government. Public reporting said some deportees were sent to CECOT, where they were held in a prison system criticized by rights groups for extreme conditions and limited process.

That made the policy unusual even by immigration-law standards: the United States was not just removing people from the country, but in some cases transferring them into a third country's detention system.

Legal Challenges

Federal courts quickly intervened. Some judges issued emergency orders blocking removals or requiring notice and a chance to challenge the government's legal theory before deportation. Other opinions later questioned whether the proclamation described the kind of "invasion" that Congress had in mind when it enacted the statute.

The litigation turned on both process and substance: whether the Act can be used outside a conventional wartime setting, and whether the government may rely on it without individualized hearings when the consequence is immediate removal to another country or prison system.

Why This Entry Is Marked a Critical Concern

This publication assigns a critical label because the reported conduct raises several unusually serious issues at once:

  • Use of a wartime detention statute in a non-war immigration context
  • Accelerated removals with limited individualized process
  • Transfers into a third country's prison system
  • Potential non-refoulement and arbitrary-detention concerns if detainees are sent to abusive conditions without meaningful review

The historical analogy matters as well: the Alien Enemies Act was previously used during formal wars, including the period that produced Japanese internment. That history does not itself decide the legality of the 2025 proclamation, but it explains why the policy drew immediate scrutiny from civil-liberties advocates, courts, and scholars.

Source documents

Primary records

Linked reporting

Reporting and secondary sources

Related records

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