Lawsuit aims to block Trump attack on transgender medicine
Share and Follow

President Donald Trump listens during a news conference with Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba in the East Room of the White House, Friday, Feb. 7, 2025, in Washington (AP Photo/Alex Brandon).

The controversy over the Trump administration’s use of an 18th century wartime authority to send alleged members of a Venezuelan gang to a notorious prison in El Salvador without due process continued Wednesday evening as attorneys representing five men who were nearly deported under the measure implored a federal judge to continue blocking deportations under the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 (AEA).

In a 42-page filing in Washington, D.C., federal court, the plaintiffs asserted that U.S. District Judge James E. Boasberg should reject the administration’s request that he lift a temporary restraining order halting such deportations, arguing that President Donald Trump improperly invoked the power during peacetime and subsequently justified its use by obfuscating facts and misleading the court.

“On the merits, the invocation of the Act against a criminal gang cannot be squared with the explicit terms of the statute requiring a declared war or invasion by a foreign government or nation,” the filing states. “The AEA, as noted, has been invoked only three times, all during declared wars. Defendants now seek to invoke this limited wartime authority to execute summary removals wholly untethered to any actual war or to the specific conditions Congress placed on this extraordinary authority. When the government asserts ‘an unheralded power’ in a ‘long-extant statute,’ courts ‘greet its announcement with a measure of skepticism.’ That skepticism is well warranted here.”

According to the filing, the administration’s contention that enjoining its use of the AEA would compromise national security is merely an excuse to fast-track deportations without providing defendants with constitutionally mandated due process.

The plaintiffs emphasized that the government had not even attempted to claim that those allegedly subject to removal under the AEA could not be safely housed in a domestic detention center. The administration even provided a sworn declaration stating that more than a quarter of the 178 individuals already sent to El Salvador were classified as “low threat” detainees.

Share and Follow
You May Also Like

Christmas Day Tragedy: Self-Defense Alleged in Shooting of Mother and Daughters Amid Road Rage Incident

Inset: James Brown (Cincinnati Police Department). Background: The intersection where a mother…

Breaking News: Missing Doctor’s Body Discovered in Local Pond After Hospital Disappearance

Authorities have identified a body found on Christmas Day as that of…

Tragic Family Dispute: California Man Kills Half-Brother, Endangers Sleeping Nieces and Nephews with Gas Leak

A 32-year-old man from California has been apprehended and faces charges for…

Shocking Incident: Mother Faces Charges After Allegedly Slamming Infant in Heated Altercation

Shaniqua Gibson (Raleigh County Sheriff”s Office). A mother from West Virginia has…

Shocking Christmas Tragedy: Utah Woman Charged with Boyfriend’s Murder After Grisly Sidewalk Discovery

A Utah woman faces murder charges following the tragic events of Christmas…

Judge Drops Criminal Trial for Kilmar Abrego Garcia Amid ‘Prima Facie Vindictiveness’; Government Granted Final Opportunity in Human Smuggling Case

Inset: Kilmar Abrego Garcia in an undated photo (CASA). Background: President Donald…

Father-Daughter Incest Case: DNA Confirms Paternity of Infant Son, Leading to Criminal Charges

A father and daughter in North Carolina were taken into custody last…

Prosecutors Weigh Murder Charges in Tragic Case of 6-Year-Old Girl Allegedly Confined and Malnourished

Inset left to right: Susan Robinson, Tonya McKnight, and Tery’n McKnight (Mecklenburg…