A federal judge on Wednesday will consider the fate of more than 20,000 trial government employees who were fired by Trump’s administration.
During the trial at the US District Court in Maryland, Hakim James Berdar will consider issuing a temporary detention order that will block the shooting in the future and return the employees who have been dismissed.
The Courts of Courts Wednesday came after 20 Democratic Attorney General Sues to block the shooting last week.

The protesters hold signs of solidarity with the American government federation from District Government employees 14 at a general meeting to support federal workers at the Personnel Management Office in Washington, March 4, 2025.
Alex WROBLEWSKI/AFP Via Getty Images
“This large-scale and careless shooting does not only subdue the Plaintiff’s countries and people throughout the country for chaos. They also violate the law,” said a Democratic official in their complaintsnamed 41 agents and head agents as defendants.
The Attorney General has argued that the Trump government violated the federal law by shooting by failing to give the 60 days notice needed for reducing strength, choosing to pursue the termination of employment “suddenly and without prior notice.”
Lawyers with the Department of Justice have argues that the state has no standing position Because they “cannot interrupt themselves into work relations between the United States and government workers,” and that to provide temporary detention orders will “avoid” the administrative process to challenge the dismissal.
In separate lawsuits, two other federal judges have refused to immediately block the shooting of federal employees or to return them to their position.
“The third time is not a charm. Like the union and plaintiff of the organization, the state is a foreigner in the work relations in question and cannot interfere with the exclusive improvement scheme issued by the congress to prosecute this dispute,” lawyer with DOJ argued.