Judge to weigh or Trump administration has violated the order not to deport Venezolese

Apr 03, 2025 03:31 PM IST USA-Trump/Migration (PIX): Judge to weigh or Trump administration violated the order not to deport the Venezolan. * Judge to weigh or Trump administration has violated the order not to deport the Judge Boasberg investigations. Cohen and Ted Hesson Washington, -An American judge will hold a hearing on Thursday whether the Trump administration has violated his order that temporarily blocks the deportation of the alleged Venezuelan gang members under a rarely excluded 18th century Act. US District Judge James Boasberg in Washington on March 15 imposed a two-week ban on the deportations of accused members of the Tren de Aragua gang under the Alien Enemies Act, while considering a lawsuit brought by some migrants in Venezuela who disputes the legality of the law. Boasberg is now investigating whether Republican President Donald Trump’s administration violated the order by not returning two deportation flights that were in the air when he issued the order. The Venezuelan migrants aboard the aircraft were handed over to officials in El Salvador, where they are held. The hearing starts at 3pm EDT. The relief has the concern among the Democrats and some legal observers cause the Trump administration to not meet unfavorable court rulings. Trump called on Boasberg’s prosecution after blocking the deportations. This led to a rare rebuke by American Chief Justice John Roberts, who says appeals, not prosecutions, was the right response to differences of opinion with court orders. The Trump administration says it did not violate Boasberg’s order. In a court conservation on March 25, lawyers from the Justice Department wrote that the migrants had already been deported by the time the judge ruled because the aircraft left the US airspace. They also said Boasberg could not order the executive branch to bring the alleged members of Tren de Aragua, who call the Trump administration a terrorist organization, from overseas. “Courts do not have the authority to micromantly how the president decides to deal with terrorists abroad,” the lawyers of the Justice Department wrote. The government also has the privilege of the state secrets, a doctrine that prevents sensitive government information in civil litigation to prevent Boasberg from providing more details about the timing of the flights. Attorneys of the Venezuelan migrants said in a 31 March that Boasberg’s order was clearly intended to prevent them from being handed over to a foreign government, which means the Trump administration has violated it. The migrants’ advocates say they did not get the chance to dispute the government’s allegation that they were Tren de Aragua members before being deported under the alien enemies Act. The law, best known for using Japanese, German and Italian immigrants during World War II, allows foreign citizens to be deported without the final removal orders of immigration judges. Immigration -advocates, family members and advocates said the authorities are aimed at young Venezuelan men who are not gang members, according to the wrong belief that their tattoos honoring family members, their professions and even football teams, Tren de Aragua membership indicates. Boasberg extended its temporary restriction order for another two weeks on Friday, as advocates for the migrants seek a prolonged provisional order. The Trump administration has asked the US Supreme Court to reverse Boasberg’s initial order after an appeals court confirmed it. This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without edits to text.