Trump well sees the idea of sending “hard criminals” to El Salvador’s hellhouse

He confirmed on Tuesday (4.2.25) that he would want prisoners sent to U.S. prisons in , an intention concerning “hard criminals”, although the idea conflicts with many legal obstacles. “If we had the right to do so, I would do it without hesitation,” the US president stressed on the proposal of the president of El Salvador to “host” in his notorious prisons of tough criminals from the US. “I don’t know if it’s possible, we’re still looking at the issue,” he noted. DIVERSE “It’s no different than our own criminal system, except that it would cost much less and it would be more dissuasive,” he considered. Even American subjects, in the vast prison built on his day. He asked in exchange for a reward that would help fund his country’s prison system, which is full of ‘war’ against the gangs he declared. CORVERSE Trump compared the proposal with “private prisons” in the US, which also receive funding from the US state, adding that the cost of switching to Salvador would be lower. The president of the US explained that he wants to send to El Salvador’s prisons “hard criminals” he has described as “animals”. What the US Constitution predicts There are not many precedents in modern times regarding sending her democratic country subjects to prisons abroad. Moreover, the American Constitution expressly prohibits “inhumane and unusual punishments”, which guarantees in practice that there will be appeals to justice if the plan goes ahead. “Obviously, we need to study it from our side. There are apparently legal dimensions” that raise obstacles, American Foreign Minister Marco Rubio acknowledged earlier yesterday. “We have a Constitution, we have all kinds of things, but it is a very generous offer,” he added speaking to the press in Costa Rica, part of his tour of central America. “No one had ever made such an offer, to send abroad with a fraction of the cost of some of the most dangerous and violent criminals we have in the US,” insisted the head of American diplomacy.