Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
A federal judge denied on Monday the Trump administration application to cancel a judicial hearing that involves the president Donald Trump’s The use of a law in times of war to deport hundreds of Venezuelan citizens, and if the White House knew the court order, an extraordinary effort that occurred just moments before the administration officials had to testify under oath.
The presentation of the Department of Justice occurred shortly after the United States District Judge, James Boasberg, ordered the lawyers that the courts are the Court on Monday for a “Audience of Acts” that implies the use of Trump of the Law of Alien Enemies of the Era of the Age of 1798, and if the Trump administration violated its previous judicial order that blocks the Trump administration to invoke the law. Venezuelan national athletes and alleged members of Violent once they train Aragua, for 14 days.
The law has only been used three times in the history of the United States, more recently during World War II.
During the hearing on Monday, which lasted about 45 minutes, Judge Boasberg sometimes seemed frustrated when he pressed the government’s lawyers to obtain more details about why his order on Saturday, who asked the administration to immediate The alleged members of the Aragua train gang were not returned to the United States.
“My orders do not seem to have much weight,” Jude Boasberg said near the end of the audience. Both parties must return to the court for a hearing on the Trump administration request to vacate the case.
Who is James Boasberg, the judge of the United States at the center of Trump’s deportation efforts?
Trump and the Logo of the Department of Justice. Getty images. (Getty images)
During the hearing, the Trump administration refused to provide information to Judge Boasberg on how many flights transported migrants took off on Saturday, citing national security protections.
“Those are operational issues, and I am not free to provide information,” said a Trump administration lawyer to the court.
Judge Boasberg, in response, ordered the Department of Justice to provide the court more information in writing on Tuesday at noon.
By granting the emergency order, on Saturday, Boasberg put on the side of the plaintiffs, the democracy forward and the ACLU, who had argued that deportations would probably represent imminent and “irreparable” damage for migrants under the proposed time.
Trump’s policy on border skippers empowers the use of ‘maximum consequences’, he tells Fox
Judge Boasberg also ordered the Trump Administration on Saturday to immediately stop any planned deportation and notify its clients that “any plane containing these people who will take off or who is in the air must be returned to the United States,” he said.
But the decision apparently came too late to stop a plane full of more than 200 migrants who were deported to El Salvador.
White House Secretary Karoline Leavitt He told Fox News In an interview that an airplane that transported hundreds of migrants, including more than 130 people withdrawn under the Alien enemies law, had already “left American airspace” for when the order was transmitted.
The White House Press Secretary, Karoline Leavitt, speaks during the newspaper with information on the presentation of the White House press in the James Brady’s press room of the White House. ((Photo of Alex Wong/Getty images))
He also suggested that the order itself was not “legal” and pointed out the intention of the Trump administration to appeal.
In response, the ACLU asked the court to order the government to submit statements, under oath, that the planes had taken off after the court order.
“If the airplanes had clarified the territory of the United States, the United States retained custody at least until the planes landed and the individuals were delivered to foreign governments,” said the ACLU in its presentation.
Click here to get the Fox News application
Judge Boasberg, a designated Obama, sometimes seemed a bit incredulous that the Trump administration decided to advance with the deportation of hundreds of migrants to El Salvador, pressing lawyers for the Department of Justice about whether he believed that there were better options than to fulfill the decision he delivered on Saturday.
“It is not then the best course, return airplanes to the United States and discover what to do, what to say: ‘We don’t care, we will do what we want?'” He asked.