The March 14 directive, signed by Attorney General Pam Bondi, uses an obscure 18th-century law — the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 — to give law enforcement nationwide the power to bypass basic constitutional protections.

According to the memo, agents can break into a home if getting a warrant is “impracticable,” and they don’t need a judge’s approval. Instead, immigration officers can sign their own administrative warrants. The bar for action is low — a “reasonable belief” that someone might be part of a Venezuelan gang is enough.

  • naught
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    14 hours ago

    Im willing to bet the odds she’ll die at the death camp are lower than in a close quarters gunfight with a bunch of dumbfucks firing away.

    Feel free to go out in an unnecessary blaze of glory though. Very macho 👌

    I’d do my best to make sure I could see my wife again

      • naught
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        11 hours ago

        Either die in a hail of gunfire or never see her again isn’t really the dilemma (yet). trump’s deportations are fucking horrific, but these prisons do not have a 100% death rate. I figure our odds are better fighting to get her out alive rather than a gunfight.

        Y’all can keep the wild west fantasy. I’m being realistic ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

      • naught
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        11 hours ago

        disgusting low effort troll reply

        • scintilla@lemm.ee
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          11 hours ago

          I stand by the spirit of what I said but it was definitely more crass than intended. You probably wouldn’t snitch on her but you would just say you’d see if you could get visitation as they take her.