The topic of discussion for this Constitution Monday concerns the constitutionality of the Trump administration deporting Tren de Aragua (TdA) gang members. Hans von Spakovsky posted a report at The Daily Signal explaining how the U.S. Supreme Court overruled a decision by a lower court judge.
On
Monday night, a 5-to-4 majority of the Supreme Court not only dissolved the
controversial temporary restraining orders issued by Judge James Boasberg of
the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, but the high court, in
essence, took the case away from him.
So
much for any pending action by Boasberg to hold the government in contempt for
deporting to El Salvador the gangbangers of Tren de Aragua (TdA), a
vicious Venezuelan drug cartel that has been designated as a foreign terrorist
organization.
On
March 14, President Donald Trump issued Proclamation No. 10903
invoking the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 to detain and remove
Venezuelan nationals who are members of TdA.
The
Alien Enemies Act allows removal from the United States of foreign citizens of
a nation with which the U.S. has a “declared war” or that threatens or
perpetrates an “invasion or predatory incursion” of this country. This
challenge was brought by five detained individuals and a class of all others in
U.S. custody who are in that category.
Boasberg issued
a temporary restraining order preventing the removal of the five named
individuals and another restraining order preventing the removal of
the class.
In
a per curium decision (a decision that doesn’t reveal who wrote it), Chief
Justice John Roberts and Justices Brett Kavanaugh, Neil Gorsuch, Samuel Alito,
and Clarence Thomas vacated those two temporary restraining orders issued by
Boasberg.
This
lawsuit was filed under the Administrative Procedure Act late on a Friday night
by the ACLU. Boasberg held a hearing the next day when the military flights,
taking the detainees to a prison in El Salvador, were already in the air.
The
Justice Department asserted that Boasberg’s orders were issued too late to be
given effect after the aliens were already out of the country and en route to
El Salvador. But the judge was apparently considering contempt
charges and other possible penalties against administration officials for
supposedly disobeying his orders to turn the planes around and fly back to the
United States.
After
a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit in a
split opinion refused to stay Boasberg’s orders, Trump’s Justice
Department filed an emergency appeal with the U.S. Supreme Court. The court did
not reach the underlying substantive legal issues about the meaning and
application of the Alien Enemies Act, but dissolved the restraining orders on
jurisdictional grounds.
The
court pointed to a 1948 case, Ludecke v. Watkins, which involved the
removal of a German alien under the Alien Enemies Act. Under the holding of
that case, said the court, the act is a statute that largely “precludes
judicial review.”
As
a result, individuals detained under the Alien Enemies Act must bring their own
legal actions asking for a writ of habeas corpus challenging the legality of
their detention. Habeas claims, the court said, must be brought in the judicial
district where the aliens are detained; in this case, that means Texas.
The
ACLU chose not to follow that approach, but instead opted to challenge the
application of Trump’s action to all of these aliens. Indeed, it dropped the
only cognizable claim when it dismissed the challengers’ habeas claims. As a
result, Boasberg lacked jurisdiction over this case because it was not properly
filed in his district.
That
means that Boasberg has no power to issue any more orders in this case and has
no power to hold the administration in contempt or impose any other penalties
for supposedly disobeying his orders that should never have been issued in the
first place.
Moreover,
because habeas actions challenge the actual detention of actual individuals,
they have to be individually asserted. No judge can certify a “class action”
for a group in a habeas action.
Any
Venezuelan members of TdA who want to contest the use of the Alien Enemies Act
against them will each have to file a habeas action in the Lone Star State or
wherever else they are being held.
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