The Justice Department (DOJ) responded to District Judge James Boasberg, saying President Donald Trump blocked the use of alien enemies and expelled suspected Venezuelan gang member Tren de Aragua (TDA), saying “the court lacks jurisdiction.”
Legal SubmitAttorney General Pam Bondy asked the court to “remove the hearing and remove grave intrusions related to already-occurring administrative bodies.” Bill Melgin of Fox News It's attracting attention The judge “denies allegations to evict/cancellate the Trump Administrator's hearing.”
“The plaintiffs cannot use these cases to interfere with the president's national security and foreign disability authorities, and the courts lack jurisdiction to do so,” the DOJ wrote. “When we set up a hearing this afternoon in response to the plaintiff's submission (Dkt. 21) and the order of this court, the government will submit the following response: representing the full scope of attorneys to be shared with the public or plaintiff, to provide the information necessary to confirm government compliance.
The DOJ submission seeking exemption from the hearing comes in response to Boasberg, who ordered the Trump administration to halt deportation of Venezuelan immigrants after the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the democratic forward filed a joint lawsuit on behalf of five Venezuelan immigrants.
John Binder of Breitbart News reported that a lawsuit was raised on a plane loaded into TDA and MS-13 “Trump “calls alien enemy laws and loads 300 illegal alien gang members.”
Trump has invoked the alien enemy laws and loaded nearly 300 illegal alien gang members related to Tren de Aragua and MS-13, both designated terrorist groups, into deportation flights to El Salvador.
The DOJ continued its filing, saying, “The government complied with the court's temporary restraining order issued on the morning of March 15th and did not delete any of the five individual plaintiffs.”
The plaintiffs appear to be uncontested as already explained by the government, but the government complied with the court's temporary restraining order issued on the morning of March 15th and did not remove any of the five individual plaintiffs. The government did so despite strong jurisdiction and other opposition to the court's unprecedented claims regarding jurisdiction to consider the declaration. cf. Ludeckev. Watkins335 US 160, 164 (1948) (explains that “the very nature of the President's power to order the removal of all enemy aliens rejects the notion that the court can resort to the exercise of his discretion”).
As reported by Breitbart News, Trump invoked the Alien Enemy Act of 1798.
In response to Boasberg's order, Bondi criticized him in a statement in support of “Tren de Aragua terrorists on American security.”
“The order ignores President Trump's established authority on power and puts the public and law enforcement at risk,” Bondy wrote. “The Department of Justice is not obsessed with efforts to stop this invasion and make America safe again, working with the White House, the Department of Homeland Security and all of its partners.”
