We start the week with a question that has arisen in multiple cases just a couple of months in to Donald Trump’s second term: Did his administration violate a court order?
The latest iteration of the question comes in litigation that developed quickly over the weekend, after Trump invoked the Alien Enemies Act to summarily deport people who the administration said are members of a transnational gang called Tren de Aragua.
The American Civil Liberties Union sued, and on Saturday, the chief federal trial judge in Washington, D.C., ordered the government not to remove people pursuant to Trump’s proclamation. The government is appealing Judge James Boasberg’s temporary restraining orders, and litigation will proceed in the D.C. federal appeals court this week as the Trump administration seeks to upend them.
But in the meantime, the ACLU told Boasberg in a court filing early Monday that “media reports and publicly available data” suggest that the government defendants “may have violated the Court’s Orders.” The plaintiffs asked the judge to “seek immediate clarification from Defendants, in one or more sworn declarations, about their conduct regarding this Court’s Orders.”
The plaintiffs noted that Boasberg had told the government to turn around any planes carrying people pursuant to the proclamation, and they questioned the government’s compliance with that mandate, suggesting that officials had played fast and loose with the judge’s directives. To get to the bottom of the matter, the plaintiffs want sworn declarations from the government on the following points:








