The administration asks the Supreme Court to lift the blockade of judge on deportations under the law of alien enemies

The administration asks the Supreme Court to lift the blockade of judge on deportations under the law of alien enemies

The Trump Administration has asked the United States Supreme Court to urgently raise the temporary restriction order of the United States District Judge, James Boasberg, which blocks deportations of the alleged members of Train Gangs in Aragua under the alien enemies law.

“Only this court can prevent the trot rule from returning more to the separation of powers: the sooner, the better,” wrote the Attorney General Sarah Harris in an emergency application before the court.

The appeal follows Wednesday by Wednesday by 2-1 by the Court of Appeals of the DC Circuit that defends the order of Boasberg and defending its jurisdiction in the matter.

“Here, the orders of the District Court have rejected the president’s trials on how to protect the Nation against foreign terrorist organizations and risk weakening the effects for delicate foreign negotiations,” Harris wrote in his application on Friday.

“More widely, the rule for a trotrarate has become such a common place between the district courts that the basic functions of the executive branch are in danger. In the two months since the day of the inauguration, the district courts have issued more than 40 cautious or tro against the executive branch,” Harris wrote.

The Court of Appeals heard arguments on Monday about the use of the Law of Alien Enemies Enemies by the Trump Administration last week to deport more than 200 alleged members of migrant gangs to El Salvador without due process.

Last week, Trump invoked Alien enemies law, a war authority used to deport non -citizens with little or not due process, arguing that the Venezuelan gang Train of Aragua is a “hybrid criminal state” that is invading the United States.

The alleged members of the Venezuelan criminal organization, Aragua Train, which were deported by the United States government, are arrested at the Center for Confinement of Terrorism in Tecoluca, El Salvador in a photo obtained on March 16, 2025.

El Salvador presidential press office through Reuters

Judge Boasberg temporarily blocked the use of the president of the law to deport the alleged members of the gang, qualifying the “terribly terribly” and “incredibly problematic” moving, and ordered that the government change the two flights that transport the alleged gang members. The authorities could not change the flights, saying that they were already in international waters.

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An official of the application of immigration and customs of the United States last week recognized in an affidavit that “many” of the alleged gang members had no criminal record in the United States, but said that “the lack of specific information about each individual actually highlights the risk they represent” and “demonstrates that they are terrorists with respect to who we lack a full profile.”

Administration officials have not been clear about the evidence they have to show that detainees are gang members.

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