On Monday, a federal court denied the Trump administration’s request to call off a hearing from the president by president Donald Trump’s The use of a wartime law to deport hundreds of Venezuelan nationals, and whether the White House deliberately violated the judicial order – an extraordinary effort that came only a few moments before administration officers would testify under oath.
The submission of the Ministry of Justice came shortly after the American district judge James Boasberg ordered lawyers to go to court on Monday for a “fact-finding” in which Trump includes the use of the 1798 Alien Enemies Act from 1798 deport Venezuelan nationals and alleged members of Violent as soon as they train Aragua for 14 days.
The law has only been used three times in American history, most recently during the Second World War.
During the hearing of Monday, which lasted about 45 minutes, Judge Boasberg sometimes seemed frustrated when he pressed government lawyers for more information about why his Saturday order – who called on the administration to immediately return all aircraft with expelled migrants, including the Venezuelan subjects and claimed the Aragua -gangs.
“My orders don’t seem to bear much weight,” said Jude Boasberg at the end of the hearing. Both parties are back in the court on Friday for a hearing about the request of the Trump government to leave the case.
Who is James Boasberg, the American judge in the center of Trump’s deportation efforts?

Trump and the Doj logo. Getty images. (Getty Images)
During the hearing, the Trump administration repeatedly refused to provide information to Judge Boasberg about how many flights that migrants wore on Saturday, with reference to the protection of national security.
“These are operational issues, and I am not free to provide information,” a lawyer for the Trump governance told the court.
Judge Boasberg ordered the Ministry of Justice in response to provide the court on Tuesday at noon more information.
When granting the emergency order on Saturday the side of Boasberg the side of the claimants – democracy ahead and the ACLU – who had argued that the deportations would probably cause the threatening and “irreparable” damage to the migrants in the proposed migrants.
Trump policy on border jumpers authorizes the use of ‘maximum consequences’, Border Agent tells Fox
Judge Boasberg also ordered the Trump administration on Saturday to stop planned deportations immediately and to inform their customers that “every plane with these people will take off or in the air, must be sent back to the United States,” he said.
But the decision apparently came too late to stop a plane full of more than 200 migrants who were deported to El Salvador.
White House Pers Secretary Karoline Leavitt FOX NEWS told In an interview that an aircraft with hundreds of migrants, including more than 130 people who were removed under the Alien Enemies Act, had already left “our airspace” “by the time the order was handed out.

White House Pers Secretary Karoline Leavitt speaks during the Daily White House Press Briefing in the James Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House. ((Photo by Alex Wong/Getty images))
She also suggested that the command itself was not “legal” and noted that the intention of the government Trump to appeal.
In response, the ACLU asked the court to order the government to submit statements, under Ede, that the planes had indeed left after the court’s order.
“Whether or not the aircraft had cleared the American area, the US kept custody at least until the aircraft landed and the individuals were transferred to foreign governments,” the ACLU said in their submission.
Click here to get the Fox News app
Judge Boasberg, an Obama -appointed, sometimes seemed somewhat unbelieving that the Trump command chose to continue with the deportation of hundreds of migrants to El Salvador, and insisted on lawyers for the Ministry of Justice about whether they believed that there were better options than to meet the decision he had finished on Saturday.
“Is it not the better course, to bring the planes back to the United States and find out what to do, then say:” We don’t care, we will do what we want? “” He asked.