
An American judge said on Wednesday, April 16, he had found a “probable cause” to keep the administration of President Donald Trump in a deportation case, increasing bets in the confrontation of the White House with the justice system.
The White House said he planned an “immediate” appeal to the decision of the James Boasberg district judge, who had ordered the government to stop flights of more than 200 alleged members of Venezuelan gangs to El Salvador.
Boasberg issued a temporary resting order on March 15 to stop deportations, which were carried out under a dark law of war in times of war, the alien enemies law of 1798, which eliminates due due legal process.
In a written opinion, the judge cited evidence that the Government, participated in “deliberate or reckless contempt” or its order when it was processed with the flights. “The defendant does not provide a convincing reason to avoid the conclusion that seems obvious … that deliberately breached the written order of this court and separated their oral command that explicitly outlined what implied compliance,” hey.
The actions of the administration were “enough for the court to conclude that there is a probable cause to find the government in criminal contempt,” Boasberg wrote. The judge said the government would be sacrificed a final opportunity to “purge that contempt” or face more judicial measures.
From his return to the White House in January, Trump has flirted with an open challenge of the Judiciary after the setbacks to his right -wing agenda, with deportation cases that take the center of the stage. “We plan to see the immediate relief of the appeal,” said White House Communications director Steven Cheung, in a statement after the judge’s ruling. “The president is 100% committed to ensuring that terrorists and illegal criminal migrants are no longer a threat to Americans and their communities throughout the country.”
‘Administrative Error’
When invoking the Alien Enemies Law, which had only used the duration of the War of 1812, World War I and World War II, Trump said he was pointing to transnational gangs that he had declared foreign terrorist organizations. That included the Venezuelan group Train El Aragua, but the lawyers of several of the deported Venezuelans have said that their clients were not gang members, they had not committed crimes and were largely attacked on the basis of their tattoos.
Trump has usually criticized the decisions that slow his policies and power, and attacked the judges who issued them, including Boasberg. The Republican President said Wednesday that the US courts are “totally out of control”, ingenious on his social platform of truth: “They seem to hate” Trump “Trump Trump, that everything goes!”
His administration is also under fire about his admission that Kilmar Abrego García, who lived in Maryland’s eastern state and married an American citizen, was deported to a notorious prison in El Salvador due to an “administrative error.” A judge ordered Trump to “facilitate” his return, an order confirmed by the Supreme Court, but his government said the court did not have the authority to order to return him.
Trump claimed that Abrego García is “member of the MS-13 gang and foreign terrorist from El Salvador”, while press secretary Karoline Leavitt said she was “committed to human trafficking.” The man never accused of crimes.
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