Attorney General Pam Bondi and other DOJ officials are asking a federal judge to pause a deadline on providing more information on the deportation flights.
President Donald Trump will continue his mass deportations of illegal immigrants under the Alien Enemies Act, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said on March 19.
This comes amid an ongoing legal battle between the Justice Department and a federal judge who ordered the flights to cease this past week.
âAmericans can absolutely expect to see the continuation of the mass deportation campaign,â Leavitt said during a briefing at the White House on Wednesday. âWe have judges who are acting as partisan activists from the bench. … We will continue to comply with these court orders [and] we will continue to fight these battles in court.â
Leavitt also said there are no new flights slated yet.
After a group of anonymous Venezuelan nationals sued the administration in anticipation of Trumpâs proclamation, U.S. District Judge James Boasberg ordered the deportations to cease at 7:25 p.m. ET on March 15.
Boasberg gave the administration until noon on Wednesday to provide the information under seal.
Cerna said a third flight departed after the order was released but consisted of passengers with removal orders from immigration judges, and none was removed âsolely on the basis of the Proclamation at issue.â
âThe pending questions are grave encroachments on core aspects of absolute and unreviewable Executive Branch authority relating to national security, foreign relations, and foreign policy,â the Justice Department wrote in the filing.
Attorney General Pam Bondi and other top Justice Department officials argued that the orders imply that the judiciary sees itself as âsuperior to the Executive Branch, particularly on non-legal matters involving foreign affairs and national security.â
âThe two branches are coequal, and the Courtâs continued intrusions into the prerogatives of the Executive Branch, especially on a non-legal and factually irrelevant matter, should end,â the filing states.
âContinuing to beat a dead horse solely for the sake of prying from the Government legally immaterial facts and wholly within a sphere of core functions of the Executive Branch is both purposeless and frustrating to the consideration of the actual legal issues at stake in this case,â the Justice Department added.
The officials asked Boasberg to pause his noon deadline in part to give them time to decide whether to âinvoke the state secrets privilegeâ to avoid complying with the judgeâs request.
They also referred to flight tracking data showing several flights that landed after Boasbergâs order, one of them in El Salvador.
Sam Dorman, Zachary Stieber, and Aldgra Fredly contributed to this request.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
Running For Office? Conservative Campaign Consulting – Election Day Strategies!
