U.S. District Decide James Boasberg on Friday prolonged his temporary restraining order blocking deportations underneath the Alien Enemies Act for one more two weeks.
The order got here hours after the Trump administration requested the U.S. Supreme Courtroom to urgently elevate Boasberg’s block on using the AEA to deport alleged Tren de Aragua gang members.
Decide Boasberg’s momentary restraining order blocking the deportations — issued on March 15 — was set to run out on Saturday, and his new order extends the order till at the least April 12. He additionally set an April 8 listening to to think about a longer-lasting preliminary injunction.
“As this Courtroom just lately defined, Plaintiffs are entitled to a TRO enjoining their elimination at the least till they’ve had an opportunity to problem that they’re coated by the Proclamation,” Decide Boasberg wrote concerning the momentary restraining order.
In its emergency utility to the Supreme Courtroom earlier Friday, Trump administration attorneys wrote that “Solely this Courtroom can cease rule-by-TRO from additional upending the separation of powers — the earlier, the higher.”
“Right here, the district courtroom’s orders have rebuffed the President’s judgments as to the right way to shield the Nation in opposition to overseas terrorist organizations and threat debilitating results for delicate overseas negotiations,” Performing Solicitor Normal Sarah Harris wrote.
“Extra broadly, rule-by-TRO has turn into so commonplace amongst district courts that the Govt Department’s primary capabilities are in peril. Within the two months since Inauguration Day, district courts have issued greater than 40 injunctions or TROs in opposition to the Govt Department,” Harris wrote.
Alleged members of the Venezuelan legal group Tren de Aragua who have been deported by the U.S. authorities, are detained on the Terrorism Confinement Heart in Tecoluca, El Salvador in a photograph obtained Mar. 16, 2025.
El Salvador Presidential Press Workplace through Reuters
The attraction adopted Wednesday’s 2-1 ruling by the D.C. Circuit Courtroom of Appeals upholding Boasberg’s order and defending his jurisdiction within the matter.
The appeals courtroom heard arguments Monday over the Trump administration’s use of the Alien Enemies Act earlier this month to deport greater than 200 alleged migrant gang members to El Salvador with out due course of.
Trump invoked the Alien Enemies Act — a wartime authority used to deport noncitizens with little-to-no due course of — by arguing that the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua is a “hybrid legal state” that’s invading america.
Decide Boasberg quickly blocked the president’s use of the legislation to deport the alleged gang members, calling the removals “awfully horrifying” and “extremely troublesome,” and ordered that the federal government flip round two flights carrying greater than 200 alleged Tren de Aragua members to El Salvador. Authorities failed to show the flights round, saying they have been already in worldwide waters.
An official with the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement subsequently acknowledged in a sworn declaration that “many” of the alleged gang members didn’t have legal information in america — however mentioned that “the dearth of particular details about every particular person really highlights the danger they pose” and “demonstrates that they’re terrorists with regard to whom we lack an entire profile.”