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The mass judge denies the request of eight migrants to stop the expulsion of South Sudan

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Friday, eight migrants was denied a request by a federal judge of Massachusetts so that their expulsion in South Sudan has stopped.

The lawyers of the Ministry of Justice said that men should be transported by plane to South Sudan Friday at 7:00 p.m. after two courts planned their emergency request on July 4, one day when the courts were otherwise closed, Reuters reported.

The migrants, who are from Cuba, Laos, Mexico, Burma, Sudan and Vietnam, filed new complaints on Thursday after the United States Supreme Court said that the Federal Judge of Boston, Brian Murphy, did not have the Department of Internal Security to hold them.

Also Friday, Federal Judge Randolph Moss in Washington interrupted the efforts of the Trump administration to expel the eight migrants to South Sudan, the last case testing the legality of the Trump administration to send illegal immigrants to third countries.

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Row of people walking on a military plane

Illegal migrants align on a military plane to return to Ecuador. Friday, a federal judge interrupted the efforts of the Trump administration to send eight migrants to Soutd Soudan. (Fox News)

Moss had briefly interrupted the expulsion after the lawyers of the migrants filed the new complaints in court and sent the case to Boston, where Murphy rejected the complaint.

The eight men argued that their deportations to South Sudan would violate the Constitution, which prohibits the “cruel and unusual” punishment, reported Reuters. They were found guilty of various crimes, including four convicted of murder, said the Ministry of Internal Security.

They were detained for six weeks at a military base in Djibouti instead of being brought back to the United States.

Migrants made new complaints on Thursday, after the Supreme Court said that a Federal Judge of Boston could no longer force the Ministry of Internal Security to hold them, Reuters reported.

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Fox News Digital contacted the White House.

During Friday’s hearing with Moss, a government lawyer argued that the orders of the court interrupting agreed deportations pose a serious problem for American diplomatic relations and would make foreign countries less likely to accept transfers of migrants to the future.

The case is the last development on the legality of the Trump administration campaign to dissuade immigration by sending migrants to places other than their countries of origin in accordance with other countries, according to Reuters.

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“It seems almost obvious to me that the American government cannot take human beings and send them in circumstances in which their physical well-being is simply at risk of punishing them or sending a signal to others,” Moss said at the hearing.

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