The Ministry of Justice said that the Trump administration deported a Lebanese doctor who was an assistant professor at the College of Medicine at the University of Brown after the investigators found “sympathetic photos and videos” of Hezbollah leaders on its phone.
Dr. Rasha Alama, 34, was arrested after arriving at Logan International Airport in Boston on Thursday. Her family claimed that officials had not provided any reason for her deportation, and they said that her rights violate because she had an active visa to live in the United States.
The Ministry of Justice has already claimed that the company, Road I Island, has a rapprochement of the terrorist group that is based in Lebanon, with photos and videos of Hezbollah leaders located in the deleted material folder in its cell phone.
It was also claimed that Alwowe admitted that she had attended a funeral for the Hezbollah head of Hassan Nasrallah's deaths last month during his visit to the family in Lebanon, according to the Federal Reserve Council.
She claimed that she attended the ceremony “from a religious perspective”, not a political, according to politics.
“CBP interrogated Dr. Alawiya and decided that his real intentions in the United States cannot be determined,” said American lawyer Michael Sadi in a file to the court on Monday.
Customs and border protection spokesman Hilton Beckham said that the burden of admission to the United States is the responsibility of immigrants, adding that the agency's officers “adhere to strict protocols to determine and stop threats.”
However, the agency did not immediately mention what the “threat”, nor why she was chosen to remove, prompted her family to file a lawsuit.
The American boycott judge, Leo Sorokin, ordered on the occasion of CBP to stop the deportation of Professor Ivy League until a court hearing on Monday, but the doctor was transferred outside the country in a deliberate violation of the judge's orders.
“The government must respond to these dangerous allegations through a legal and realistic response that puts its copies of events,” Sorokin wrote in his matter. “Sorokin, who is appointed during the Obama era, wrote in his matter.
CBP claimed that he would not intentionally challenge the courts, as official John Wallace testifies that the agency did not receive the court’s order before transferring Alawieh to Paris on Friday night on a continuous trip to Lebanon.
Sorkin issued his order at 7:18 pm on Friday, according to court records, about two minutes before CBP Alawieh officers went to her journey, according to court records.
She left the doctor's journey from the gate at about 7:43 pm, and he started from the airport immediately before 8 pm, according to Flighter Tracker Flightaware.
Sorkin postpone Monday's session, and the government was given another week to provide more information about what happened with Alawieh.
A kidney transplant doctor has held a visa to be in the United States since it arrived for the first time to complete a two -year fellowship at Ohio State University.
She continued to bear her position in the subsequent fellows at the University of Washington and the Yale-Watebury program for internal medicine, which she completed in June.
After that, Alawieh was awarded the H-1B visa from the American Consulate in Lebanon, which authorized it to work at the University of Brown, according to the lawsuit filed by her family.
The lawsuit claims that Alawieh was visiting a family in Lebanon and returning to her home in Provence when she was suddenly arrested by CBP officers at Boston Airport.
The Alawieh case comes with fears in other cases during the weekend about whether the Trump administration is in line with the court rulings that prevent its agenda to migrate.
On Sunday, the Trump administration described that it had deported hundreds of Venezuelans to El Salvador under the law of foreign enemies, despite the Federal Judge’s order except for such deportation.
With wires after