Judge rules that Trump administration wrongly ended humanitarian parole for hundreds of thousands

A federal judge ruled Wednesday that the Trump administration wrongly ended humanitarian parole for hundreds of thousands of people allowed to live in the United States temporarily The decision is another legal setback for President Donald Trump s plans for mass deportation but it may prove temporary and its immediate impact was unclear U S District Judge Indira Talwani in Boston sided with people who were already admitted to the United States but were unable to renew their short-term permits They cover parole policies that benefited Afghans Ukrainians Cubans Haitians Nicaraguans Venezuelans and children from Central American countries trying to join their parents in the U S among others Talwani who was appointed by President Barack Obama declared two orders by Department of Homeland Safeguard functionaries to suspend renewals pending further review were unlikely to survive a legal challenge One of the orders gives no reasoned explanation for the actions she wrote The pause has now been in place for three months the pause is in effect an indefinite suspension she wrote The Department of Homeland Safety did not directly respond to a request for comment A group of American citizens and immigrants earlier this year sued the Trump administration for ending the long-standing legal tool presidents have used to allow people from countries where there s war or political instability to enter and temporarily live in the U S The humanitarian parole programs allowed in settlers who have legal U S residents as sponsors Trump has been ending legal pathways for immigrants to come to the U S and implementing campaign promises to deport millions of people who are in the U S illegally The plaintiffs include eight immigrants who entered the U S legally before the Trump administration ended what it called the broad abuse of humanitarian parole They can legally stay in the U S until their parole expires but the administration stopped processing their applications for asylum visas and other requests that might allow them to remain longer None are identified by their real names because they fear deportation Among them are Maksym and Maria Doe a Ukrainian couple Alejandro Doe who fled Nicaragua following the abduction and torture of his father and Omar Doe who worked for more than years with the U S military in his home country of Afghanistan