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Trump signed the first law since his inauguration

Donald Trump. Photo: Joshua Roberts / Reuters

US President Donald Trump signed the first bill of his second term, the measure requires law enforcement officers to send migrants under arrest, even if they are accused of minor crimes.

"The Department of Homeland Security will be instructed by this law to arrest all illegal migrants who have been detained for theft, robbery, shoplifting, assault on a police officer, murder, or other crime that resulted in death or serious injury," Trump said at a ceremony at the White House.

Trump recalled that the law is named after a 22-year-old medical student who was killed by an illegal immigrant in Georgia. According to the US president, she was the best in the class, the US president said.

"She was respected by everyone, including teachers. This is a very important law. America will never forget Layken "Hope" Riley, because now her name is the law," Trump said.

He said that the girl was killed by a gang member, but instead of deportation, he was released by the police, "like millions of other very dangerous people." According to the American president, the girl's killer was transported to another state at the expense of the state, but was released anyway, later he was caught stealing again.

Steve Scalise, the leader of the Republican majority in the House of Representatives, announced on January 22 that the first bill that the new composition of Congress will send to Trump will be a norm on toughening measures against migrants accused of crimes.

The "Laken Riley Act" is so named in connection with the resonant murder of a girl. The norm requires the detention of migrants arrested for minor crimes. Convicted of murdering a girl a few months before the crime was committed, he was arrested on charges of shoplifting, but released for the duration of the trial. Republicans used the murder in their election programs as an example of rampant crime among illegal immigrants.

Biden, in March last year, delivering a speech "On the state of the Union," confused the girl's name, calling her Lincoln, which the mother of the murdered woman later blamed on the then president. Later, Biden apologized, but not for the reservation, but for calling the criminal an "illegal immigrant," although, according to him, it was worth calling him an "undocumented person."

The American justice system, referring to the presumption of innocence, used a preventive measure in the form of detention, as a rule, only in relation to those accused of serious crimes — assaults or murders, if there is evidence that the defendants can escape from the investigation and trial.

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29.01.2025

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