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A Federal Court of Appeals arrested on Thursday the order of a judge of the lower court to end operations indefinitely at the Immigration Detention Center “Aligator Alcatraz” built in the Everglades of Florida.
The panel voted 2-1 to maintain the judge’s order waiting for the result of an appeal, which allows the installation to continue to keep migrants stopped for now.
Last month, the United States District Judge, Kathleen Williams, issued a preliminary court order that blocked Florida to further expand the detention center and planning operations by the end of October. The judge also ordered the State to transfer stops to other facilities and eliminate equipment and fences.
The rulings came after Lawsuit Broucht by Friends of the Everglades, The Center for Biological Diversity and the Miccosukee Tribe Accused The State and Federal Officials of Not Following Federal Law Requireing An Sensotal Reviewer’s, Theme Center, Theme Center, Theme Center, Theme Center, Theme Center, The Grousion Center, The Grousion Center, The Groinda Center, The Lawy Center, The Groutasion Center, The Lawy Center, The Grouring Center, The Lawy Center Lawy Centro, the law of the lawyer lawyer of Grouction Lawion Lawion, The Grousion Lawy Lawion Lawion protected the plants and animals.
The federal judge blocks Florida from a greater expansion of the Immigration Detention Center ‘Aligator Alcatraz’

A Federal Court of Appeals arrested the order of a judge of the lower court to finish operations indefinitely at the Immigration Detention Center “Aligator Alcatraz”. (Alon Skuy/Getty Images)
“This is a heartbreaking blow for the United States Everglades and all living creatures there, but the case is not close,” said Elise Bennett, main lawyer of the Center for Biological Diversity.
In June, the administration of Governor Ron Desantis moved quickly to build the facilities at a single -race training airport in the middle of the Everglades to support the efforts of President Donald Trump to stop and deport migrants. Desantis has said that the location of the installation was intended to deter the escape plans.
Trump toured the facilities in July and suggested that it could be used as a model for future facilities throughout the country to support its mass deportation plan.
When reacting to Thursday’s failure, Desantis said that the statements that the installation soon closed was false.
“We said we would fight with that. We said that the mission would continue. So the Alcatraz crocodile is, in fact, as we have always said, open for business,” he said on social networks.
Demands threaten to return to Cocodrilo Alcatraz operations

President Donald Trump toured the facilities in July and suggested that it could be used as a model for future facilities throughout the country to support his mass deportation plan. (Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP through Getty Images)
The National Security Department described the ruling as “a victory for the American people, the rule of law and common sense.”
“This demand was never on the environmental impacts of converting an airport developed into a detention center,” DHS said in a statement. “It is and is always open activists and judges who try to prevent forces of the order from removing the dangerous criminal aliens of our communities, stop in full.”
Florida officials said in judicial documents this week that would resume the resumption of acceptance of resumption in the installation if the request for a stay was granted.
Thought demanders say that the case is far from finishing, claiming that the installation will possibly close.

The plaintiffs in the lawsuit against the “Alcatraz crocodile” say that the case is far from finishing, claiming that the installation will be possible. (Getty images)
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“Meanwhile, if the administrations of Desantis and Trump choose to increase the operations at the detention center, they will simply show good money after evil because this installation misunderstood, which is causing damage to the Everglades,” Extimatesy, finally “, friends of the Everglades, in a statement.
The plaintiffs have argued that because Florida ended the project itself and the federal government has not contributed directly, “Aligator Alcatraz” falls out of the federal environmental review requirements, they even think federal detainees.
In the ruling on Thursday, the Court of Appeals greatly accepted these claims.
Associated Press contributed to this report.