Judge In Deportation Case Ups The Ante In Fight Over Flight Deportations

A federal judge said Thursday that the Trump administration failed to meet a court deadline to disclose details on deportation flights to El Salvador, intensifying President Donald Trumpโ€™s ongoing legal conflict with the judiciary.

U.S. District Judge James Boasberg stated that the governmentโ€™s lawyers did not provide the required information regarding the deportation flightsโ€”which included individuals slated for immediate removal under the 1798 Alien Enemies Actโ€”and failed to clarify whether they deliberately defied his court order, Fox Newsย reported.

In a scathing order issued Thursday evening, the judge noted that the government โ€œagain evaded its obligationsโ€ by not submitting the necessary details, even after he permitted them to do so under seal. The filing they eventually submitted was hours late, but he claimed it did not adequately answer his questions, Fox added.

The administration sent the court a six-paragraph declaration from a regional ICE office director in Harlingen, Texas, which informed the judge that Cabinet secretaries are โ€œactively considering whether to invoke the state secrets [act] privileges over the other facts requested by the Courtโ€™s order.โ€

Boasberg declared: โ€œThis is woefully insufficient.โ€

On Saturday, Boasberg issued an emergency restraining order that blocked the Trump administration from using the 1798 law to deport Venezuelan nationalsโ€”including alleged members of the Tren de Aragua gangโ€”for a period of 14 days. He also ordered any flights already in the air to return to U.S. soil immediately.

However, just hours later, a plane carrying hundreds of U.S. migrants, including Venezuelan nationals targeted under the law, landed in El Salvador.

Boasberg immediately directed the government to submit additional information to the court as part of a โ€œfact-finding hearingโ€ to determine whether the Trump administration knowingly defied his order and to account for the number of individuals deported, Fox noted.

After the government repeatedly failed to comply, citing national security concerns, he instructed them to provide the information under seal by noon Thursday.

Boasberg requested that government lawyers provide detailed information on Saturdayโ€™s departures, including how many planes left the U.S. carrying individuals deported โ€œsolely on the basisโ€ of that proclamation, the number of passengers on each plane, their landing destinations, and the specific takeoff times and origins.

โ€œTo begin, the Government cannot proffer a regional ICE official to attest to Cabinet-level discussions of the state-secrets privilege; indeed, his declaration on that point, not surprisingly, is based solely on his unsubstantiated โ€˜understand[ing],’โ€ he said.

Boasberg then directed the Trump administration to file a brief by March 25, explaining why its failure to return the individuals on the two earliest planes arriving from El Salvador on March 15 did not constitute a violation of his order, Fox reported.

โ€œBy March 21, 2025, at 10:00 a.m., Defendants shall submit a sworn declaration by a person with direct involvement in the Cabinet-level discussions regarding invocation of the state-secrets privilege,โ€ he added.

Boasberg had previously warned the Trump administration of potential consequences if it violated his order.

Nevertheless, at least one plane with deported migrants, allegedly belonging to the violent gang, landed later that evening in El Salvador. โ€œOopsie, too late,โ€ Salvador President Nayib Bukele said in a post on X.

In the days since, government lawyers have refused to provide court details about the deportation flights or whether the planeโ€”or planesโ€”of migrants knowingly departed U.S. soil after the judgeโ€™s order, citing national security protections.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt ripped Boasberg on Wednesday over what the administration feels are politicized demands.

โ€œThe judge in this case is essentially trying to say the president doesnโ€™t have the executive authority to deport foreign terrorists from our American soil. That is an egregious abuse of the bench,โ€ she told assembled reporters during a press briefing.


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