Legal challenges targeting the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement policies continue to emerge, with funding for many of the lawsuits tracing back to organizations supported by George Soros’s Open Society Foundations.
Breitbart reporter John Binder has tracked the financial networks behind multiple lawsuits opposing President Donald Trump’s immigration agenda.
Soros-Funded Group Behind Lawsuit Blocking Trump from Deporting Violent Illegal Aliens to South Sudan
Can someone in our Gov’t please do something to stop Soros please?!
Why are they allowed to interfere in our gov’t over and over again!
I am so sick of this!From the… pic.twitter.com/yEFUdTfQB6
— NWRain-Judi (@RYboating) May 27, 2025
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According to Binder’s reporting, Soros-funded groups have supported legal actions against Trump’s policies to deport illegal aliens, dismantle government offices overseeing immigration enforcement, and end birthright citizenship for children of illegal aliens.
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The latest legal battle involves a challenge to the Trump administration’s effort to deport violent illegal aliens to third countries, including South Sudan.
The administration began deporting individuals with final orders of removal to South Sudan earlier this year, citing the refusal of some home countries to accept individuals with criminal records.
Department of Homeland Security officials emphasized that the individuals deported had been convicted of violent crimes, including murder, rape, and child sex offenses.
“These were vicious illegal aliens,” DHS officials stated in a public release.
However, in March, the nonprofit Human Rights First joined two other organizations in filing a lawsuit against the Trump administration.
The lawsuit challenges DHS’s authority to deport illegal aliens to countries other than their nation of origin, arguing that such actions are unlawful without sufficient notice to the individuals affected.
Human Rights First has also filed litigation seeking to preserve immigration parole programs established under Joe Biden’s administration.
According to public records cited by Binder, the Soros-backed Open Society Foundations (OSF) has contributed nearly $6.2 million to Human Rights First.
In April, U.S. District Judge Brian Murphy, appointed by former President Biden to the District of Massachusetts, issued a preliminary injunction temporarily halting deportations to third countries without prior notice.
Judge Murphy’s order required the DHS to provide detained individuals with “credible fear interviews” before removing them to a country that is not their place of origin.
Since the ruling, the Trump administration has deported eight individuals with final removal orders to South Sudan.
All eight had criminal convictions, including for violent offenses such as murder and sexual assault.
Judge Murphy ruled that DHS had violated his earlier injunction and ordered the department to provide additional legal steps before proceeding with further deportations to South Sudan or similar third-country destinations.
Karoline Leavitt slams US District Judge Brian Murphy during a press conference accusing him of judicial overreach for ruling that the Trump admin violated a court order by deporting migrants to South Sudan without due process. pic.twitter.com/rUagrmSdkk
— Girl patriot (@Girlpatriot1974) May 28, 2025
Officials from South Sudan have voiced objections to receiving deportees with criminal histories, although there is no formal agreement barring the U.S. from conducting such deportations.
DHS has argued that removal to a third country is necessary in cases where an alien’s home country refuses repatriation, particularly when public safety is at risk.
The ongoing litigation underscores growing tensions between the Trump administration’s push for stricter immigration enforcement and legal challenges supported by left-leaning advocacy groups.
Many of those groups, including Human Rights First, have received substantial backing from the Soros network.
Critics of the lawsuits argue that efforts to block the removal of criminal aliens place American communities at risk and amount to judicial overreach.
The administration has signaled it will continue to pursue third-country deportation options when repatriation to an individual’s home nation is not feasible due to diplomatic or security obstacles.
The case remains active in federal court, with DHS expected to submit further documentation to comply with the judge’s orders.
Additional hearings may be scheduled as the administration continues to defend its enforcement authority.
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