
The director of the FBI, Kash Patel, said, on Friday, April 25, that an American judge had been arrested for helping an undocumented migrant to evade federal agents, climbing a growing fight between the White House and the courts on the hard line deportations of President Donald Trump. Hannah Dugan, a Milwaukee County Circuit Judge, allegedly “miscellaneous federal agents intentionally far from the subject” who intended to stop in his court, said Patel in a position on X, which he then eliminates.
“The FBI arrested Judge Hannah Dugan of Milwaukee, Wisconsin for charges of obstruction, after the evidence of Judge Dugan obstructed an immigration trial operation last week,” Patel said in his position. The migrant was arrested shortly after. “Thanks to our agents they chased the author on foot and he has been in custody since then, but the judge’s obstruction created a greater danger to the public,” Patel said. The director of the FBI appointed by Trump eliminated his position minutes after it seemed, and the state of Dugan remained by the uncle.
Decisions putting Trump’s orders awaiting
Several federal and state judges throughout the United States have issued decisions that put several of Trump’s executive orders, particularly those related to their attempt to exercise unprecedented powers to deport migrants. The Trump administration has been justifying heads with federal judges, rights groups and democrats, who say that it has trampled or ignored constitutionally enshrined rights to hurry to deport migrants, sometimes without the right to a hearing.
On Thursday, a former Judge of the County in New Mexico and his wife were tasks in custody after federal agents raided their crossings home for their port of an alleged undocumented migrant who believes that he is a member or of the train of Trene, of Trene, of Trene, of Trene.
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