[The ruling—a stunning defeat for Trump at the end of his first week
in office—protects from deportation refugees or visa holders who were
detained at American airports since the signing of so-called "Muslim
ban." It also protects those in transit when the emergency ruling was
filed.]

http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2017/01/muslim-ban-federal-court

How to process the tide of Trump news

A Federal Judge Just Issued a Stay Against Donald Trump's "Muslim Ban"
Judge Ann M. Donnelly's ruling halted deportations, but refugees
abroad remain in limbo.

JAN. 28, 2017 8:50 PM

A federal judge in Brooklyn issued an emergency stay Saturday night
against President Donald Trump's executive order banning immigration
from certain predominantly Muslim countries, temporarily allowing
people who have landed in the United States with a valid visa to
remain.

The ruling—a stunning defeat for Trump at the end of his first week in
office—protects from deportation refugees or visa holders who were
detained at American airports since the signing of so-called "Muslim
ban." It also protects those in transit when the emergency ruling was
filed.

Stay covers all those who were in transit and are being detained at
airports. Important first win--thank you @ACLU attorneys! #NoBanNoWall

— ACLU of Ohio (@acluohio) January 29, 2017
The lawsuit was brought by the American Civil Liberties Union on
behalf of two men detained at John F. Kennedy International Airport in
New York City. The men were subsequently released. Cody Wofsy, a
lawyer with the ACLU, told Mother Jones he'd worked though the night
with a large group of attorneys on Friday to write the brief that
challenged the executive order.

The director of the ACLU's Voting Rights Project announced the victory
on Twitter:

We won

— Dale Ho (@dale_e_ho) January 29, 2017
Stay is national

— Dale Ho (@dale_e_ho) January 29, 2017
Nationwide injunction - no one can be removed - govt must provide list
of names of ppl affected

— Dale Ho (@dale_e_ho) January 29, 2017
The stay, granted by Judge Ann M. Donnelly of the US District Court,
is temporary, and a court will have to decide whether to make it
permanent at a later date. But for now, people will not be deported
because of Trump's executive order.

ACLU currently estimates 100-200 people across US airports being held
because of EO. They can all stay until further notice

— Raya Jalabi (@rayajalabi) January 29, 2017
One Syrian women was reportedly about to be sent back to her home
country when the ruling came down—and was promptly taken off the
flight by Customs and Border Protection agents.

Woman w/ green card, held at US airport then put on plane "back to
Syria" per ACLU. Stay means CBP now taking her off just before take
off

— Raya Jalabi (@rayajalabi) January 29, 2017
Wofsy, the ACLU lawyer, said he planned to stay at San Francisco
International Airport on Saturday night to make sure those who are
detained there are not removed in violation of the judge's order.

"This executive order runs contrary to really our most fundamental
constitutional rights and human values in this country," Wofsy said.
"These individuals, many of whom have green cards and have lived here
for many years, can't just be put on a plane and shipped off."

You can read the judge's full order here:

[Facsimile]
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Peace Is Doable

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