US President Donald Trump can deport alleged foreign cartel members again on the basis of a controversial war law from the 18th century. This was decided by the Supreme Court in the United States. The plaintiffs were imprisoned in Texas and were therefore supposed to complain there and not in the capital Washington DC, the judges judged. The Supreme Court thus overturned a decision by judge James E. Boasberg, who in the “Alien Enemies Act” from 1798 had not seen and ordered a sufficient legal basis for the deportations to stop them. It is clear that the migrants can submit their case in Texas again. Judge Brett Kavanaugh emphasized in his reasoning that the judges agreed that the migrants should receive a judicial review. However, they are shared of where the case should be negotiated. The background is the deportation of more than 200 Venezuelans to El Salvador in March. Trump speaks of a great day of the government, the judgment celebrated. President Trump wrote on his platform Truth Social in capital letters: “A big day for justice in America!” The Supreme Court strengthened the rule of law by enabling the President to secure the borders and protect the country. Minister of Homeland Protection Kristi Noem cheered that “an activist judge” could not stop the will of the American people for a safe country. “This is a big defeat for the crazy and a great victory for the American people.” The Trump government had repeatedly massively attacked the judge. TREN de Aragua declared the terrorist organization in March that the deported by the criminal organization were the tren de Aragua. The Venezuelan government rejected this. The Tren de Aragua is a Venezuelan gang that is involved in drug trafficking, protection and human trafficking. Trump explained the Gang to a foreign terrorist organization. He argues that Tren de Aragua has “enemy actions” and “irregular warfare” against the US territory. And he accuses the gang that the gang also follows the instructions of the government of Venezuela’s authoritarian President Nicolás Maduro. Law of 1798 As a basis for justification for the deportation to El Salvador, the Trump government mainly relies on a controversial and hardly used law from 1798: the “Alien Enemies Act” (law on foreign enemies) Presidents, people in times of war or at an invasion of “enemy nations” to be detained and deported without regular procedures. The law was applied during the first and the Second World War, for example to internage German or Japanese. In space there was now the question of whether this law could be applied outside of a declared war or against other parties as a nation. After the defeat in front of a court in the Washington, Trump’s government turned to the Supreme Court. Among other things, she argued that the decision of this court endangered the government’s ability to pursue foreign policy. In addition, this prevents the deportation of dangerous gang members. It is not the first time that the judges of the Supreme Court are legally responsible for Trump’s politics. As a rule, however, it was more about technical questions. At the beginning of March, for example, the Republican had a preliminary defeat in the dispute over frozen billions of billions for development aid projects. During his first term, Trump had postponed the majority of the Supreme Court far to the right with several sacrifications.