BY Benjamin ClarkJuly 7, 2025
8 months ago
BY 
 | July 7, 2025
8 months ago

U.S. sends eight convicts to South Sudan

Eight men, shackled and convicted, were whisked away to South Sudan, a nation teetering on chaos, after a fierce legal showdown. The U.S., under Trump’s relentless deportation push, sidestepped woke judicial roadblocks to send these criminals packing, the BBC reported

The Trump administration’s drive to expand third-country deportations culminated in the removal of eight men convicted of heinous crimes like murder, sexual assault, and robbery. These men, nearing the end of their prison terms, faced rejection from their home countries—Myanmar, Cuba, Vietnam, Laos, and Mexico. South Sudan, despite its instability, became their unexpected destination.

This saga began with the men’s initial flight in May, only to be diverted to Djibouti after a Massachusetts judge threw a wrench in the plan. U.S. District Judge Brian Murphy, citing due process, demanded migrants get notice and a chance to speak with an asylum officer before third-country deportations. His ruling sparked outrage among conservatives tired of judicial overreach.

Judicial Tug-of-War Intensifies

“Activist judges,” fumed Tricia McLaughlin from the Department of Homeland Security, capturing the administration’s frustration with Murphy’s blockade. Her quip, though sharp, misses the mark—courts exist to check executive power, not to rubber-stamp it. Yet, the Supreme Court swiftly dismantled Murphy’s ruling, greenlighting the deportations.

Last week, the Supreme Court doubled down, stripping Murphy of authority to mandate due process hearings. Another judge, approached by desperate lawyers, shrugged that only Murphy had jurisdiction. With legal avenues exhausted, the men’s fate was sealed.

On Thursday, the eight men landed in Juba, South Sudan, under police and national security watch. A Department of Homeland Security photo, shared with CBS News, showed them shackled on the plane, a stark image of America’s resolve. In Juba, they’re unshackled, in a civilian facility, and reportedly in good condition—but their future remains murky.

South Sudan’s Unstable Backdrop

South Sudan, on the brink of civil war, is no safe haven. The U.S. State Department warns against travel there, citing rampant crime, kidnapping, and armed conflict. Deporting men to such a volatile nation, especially when only one is a native, fuels critics’ claims of reckless policy-making.

The Trump administration’s third-country deportation strategy isn’t new—El Salvador and Costa Rica have already received deportees. Rwanda’s confirmed talks to accept migrants, while Benin, Angola, Equatorial Guinea, Eswatini, and Moldova are rumored as potential takers. This global game of hot potato sidesteps the question: where do these men truly belong?

Only one of the eight is South Sudanese, a fact that undercuts the deportation’s logic. The others, hailing from diverse nations, were rejected by their homelands, leaving the U.S. scrambling for solutions. Dumping them in a war-torn country feels more like expediency than justice.

Policy Push Meets Moral Dilemma

Earlier this year, Secretary of State Marco Rubio revoked all South Sudanese visas, fed up with the country’s refusal to accept deportees. That hardline stance set the stage for this deportation, but at what cost? South Sudan’s instability makes it a dubious destination for anyone, let alone foreign nationals.

The men’s crimes—murder, sexual assault, robbery—are indefensible, and public safety demands action. Yet, deporting them to a nation on the edge of collapse, where most have no ties, risks trading one problem for another. Empathy for their plight doesn’t erase their guilt but questions the solution’s wisdom.

The Supreme Court’s ruling prioritized executive power over judicial checks, a win for Trump’s agenda. But McLaughlin’s “activist judges” jab ignores the deeper issue: deportations to third countries dodge accountability. A balanced policy would ensure due process without paralyzing enforcement.

Uncertain Future in Juba

In Juba, the men sit in a civilian facility, their status unclear as of Monday. They’re not in cuffs, and conditions seem stable, but South Sudan’s volatility looms large. What happens next—integration, detention, or worse—is anyone’s guess.

Trump’s push to expand third-country deportations signals a broader strategy: clear out convicted migrants, no matter the destination. While this resonates with fed-up Americans, it sidesteps the messier question of human rights with some.

Written by: Benjamin Clark
Benjamin Clark delivers clear, concise reporting on today’s biggest political stories.

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