Miami.- This Thursday, April 10, the Judge Federal Indira Talwani said that the revocation of the parole humanitarian decreed by the president Donald Trump For hundreds of Cuban, Haitian, Nicaraguan migrants and Venezuelans
“The secretary, when shortening the period of ‘Parole’ granted to these people, must have a reasoned decision,” said Talwani. He argued that the justification to finish the program was based on An incorrect interpretation of the law by the Department of National Security (DHS).
During the audience, the magistrate repeatedly questioned the argument of the United States government to end the program on April 24. He referred to the argument of the administration by defending his power to end the Parole because he no longer fulfilled his purpose. The judge said that migrants now faced the “fleeing of the country” or staying and “risking losing everything.”
The judge also stated that “what they are prioritizing are not people who illegally crossed the border, but those who followed the rules.”
Trump measure
The measure of the Trump administration to revoke the humanitarian parole affected nearby 530,000 people. This program was established by the administration of Joe Biden in 2022 for Venezuelans and in 2023 included Cubans, Nicaraguans and Haitians in 2023: allowed beneficiary migrants to remain legally in the United States for two years, as long as they had a sponsor.
Humanitarian parole is a legal figure that “authorizes temporary permit to a person who is inadmissible or not eligible to enter the United States,” according to the United States immigration and citizenship service (USCIS).
Here “urgent humanitarian reasons or for a significant public benefit prevail.”