President Trump’s administration faced accusations of defying a federal judge’s order after deporting Venezuelan migrants to El Salvador under the , despite a temporary restraining order blocking such removals. Here’s how events unfolded and the constitutional clash that followed:
### Timeline of the Controversy
– : Trump invoked the Alien Enemies Act, a 227-year-old wartime law, to deport Venezuelan migrants alleged to be members of Tren de Aragua, a gang designated as a Foreign Terrorist Organization. The act allows presidents to remove noncitizens deemed “alien enemies” during an invasion or wartime.
– : Judge James Boasberg (D.C. District Court) issued a blocking deportations and directing flights in the air to return to the U.S. until further review. His written Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) followed, halting removals for 14 days.
– : Two deportation flights to El Salvador departed the written TRO was issued. A third flight left afterward but reportedly carried no deportees under the act. Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele confirmed the arrivals, mocking the court’s intervention with a tweet: “Oopsie. Too late”.
### The Legal Standoff
:
– Argued the verbal order was not binding until formalized in writing.
– Claimed jurisdiction ended once flights left U.S. airspace, citing “national security” and operational needs.
– Asserted courts lack authority over presidential foreign policy powers under the Alien Enemies Act.
:
– Rejected the DOJ’s reasoning as a emphasizing his verbal directive was immediate.
– Ordered the administration to explain under oath whether it knowingly defied the court.
– Expanded the TRO to cover all noncitizens subject to Trump’s proclamation, signaling broader scrutiny of executive overreach.
### Implications and Next Steps
– demand deportees’ return, accusing Trump of “lawless” use of a wartime statute during peacetime.
– : The administration’s refusal to comply challenges judicial authority, with the case likely heading to the Supreme Court.
– condemned the deportations, calling them “kidnappings” and alleging a lack of evidence linking deportees to gang activity.
The showdown tests presidential power to bypass courts in immigration enforcement, setting a precedent for future uses of the Alien Enemies Act. As hearings continue, the balance between national security and due process remains in sharp focus.