US District Judge James Boasberg, federal judge who blocked Trump’s government from deporting Venezuelan immigrants who were accused of being a member of the de Aragua trend gang without legal proceedings, accused the Department of Justice to avoid “obligations” to comply with his orders for further information on deportation flights, a new submission on Thursday.
Boasberg said in a Thursday order that after the daytime deadline, the lawyer of the Department of Justice submitted a written declaration from an AS Acting Immigration and Customs Enforcement Field Officer, who repeated general information about deportation flights and that the Cabinet Secretary was still considering whether to abuse cases about cases, steps that allow the Head of the Executive Department to executive to be adjusted to rent to refresh to the secret state, a step that allows the head of the executive department to rent to give up to the secret state, a step that allows the head of the executive department to rent to refresh to refresh to the countries Execution to the state to be recommended to be adjusted to be adjusted by the states to the states to the state of interest if expressed, according to the Center for Constitutional Rights.
“This is very insufficient,” Boasberg said in response.
Boasberg ordered more information about deportation flights, which the government was carried out under the alien enemy law, the authority of the war that was rarely used. Boasberg ordered them to reverse two flights which according to the government deported allegations of migrant gang members to El Salvador. Officials failed to turn the flight.
Trump’s government has not released the names of alleged gang members deported.

In March 16, 2023, submitting a photo, Judge James E. Boasberg, Chair of the Federal District Court Judge in DC, short for a portrait in the Federal E. Barrett Prettyman court building in Washington, DC
Carolyn van Houten/The Washington Post via Getty Images, File
The Department of Justice initially refused to provide more information about flights, citing national security issues.
Boasberg said on Thursday that he required the government to show the cause on March 25 about why his response so far and the failure to restore migrants who did not document to the US did not violate temporary detention orders.
In addition, he asked the government to submit a declaration to swear at 10 o’clock in Friday by an individual involved in the Trump Cabinet discussion on State Secrets Special Rights – and to say on March 25 whether they plan to ask for these privileges.
On Thursday, ABC News’ Karen Travers asked the Press Secretary of the White House Karoline Leavitt why the government did not reverse information about deportation flights if they were sure that they met the judge’s orders.
“We are sure that we have fulfilled, and as I have said from the podium, all flights subject to the written order of the judge took off before the written order was pushed in the courtroom,” Leavitt said. “And the president is in his article, the strength of Article II and his authority under the alien enemy law to make this decision.”

In this October 2022, the photo file, the Department of Justice Department, was seen in the Head Office Building in Washington, DC
Defeat Zawrzel/Nurphoto Via Getty Images, File
Earlier this week, Trump and several Republicans houses called to the immediate Boasberg, with Trump called the judge “Radical left.”
United States Chief Justice John Roberts issued a rare statement about the threat of impeachment, signifying differences of opinion between the branches of justice and the executive.
“For more than two centuries, it has been determined that the impeachment is not the right response for disagreement on justice decisions,” Roberts said in the statement. “The normal appeal process is there for that purpose.”