The Trump Administration requested a Federal Court of Appeals on Wednesday to review an order of the lower court that threatened with contempt officials for deportation flights on March 15, the last point of inflammation in a wave of immigration disputes that took place in federal courts.
The emergency application occurred hours after the American district judge James Boasberg said he considered a probable cause that administration officials had violated judicial directives to return those flights.
In his ruling, Boasberg threatened criminal contempt charges and ordered the administration to file additional statements before April 23 explaining why said procedures should not advance.
Boasberg said that if officials do not present the statements, the court will consider holding more hearings and potentially refer the issue for prosecution.
Who is James Boasberg, the judge of the United States at the center of Trump’s deportation efforts?

The Trump administration is appealing an order by Judge James E. Boasberg that could lead to administration officials being in contempt. (Carolyn Van Houten/The Washington Post through Getty Images)
The Trump administration presented its appeal before the Court of Appeals of the DC circuit on Wednesday night.
The appeal of the Trump administration letter to the DC circuit does not include any new detail, since the facts of the case have already heard the leg by the district and the Court of Appeals.
The Court of Appeals last month failed 2-1 to maintain the temporary training order of Boasberg.
However, the Supreme Court ruled 5-4 last month that the Trump administration could resume its deportation flights under the alien enemies law, provided that persons subject to removal under the law had protections of due process, and the opportunity to pursue beans relief, or the ability of a United States court to listen to before their removal.
Boasberg said Wednesday that the Court determined that the Trump administration had demonstrated an “intentional contempt” for its emergency order of March 15, which temporarily arrested all deportation flights to El Salvador, the law of alien enemies of 1798, a “statuetee” statuet “statuet” statuet “statued” statuet “statued” status “status” status “status” status “status” status “status” status ” statuet status “statueted” statued “statueled” statueled “statued” statueled “statued” statued “statued” statueled “status” statueled “statueled” statued “statueled” statuet “statued” statued “statuet” statued “statued” status “status” statuet status “status” status “statuet status” status “status” status “status” status “status” status “status” status “status”. “Statueled” statued “statued” statueled “” “sunset” “sunset” “sunset” “atarted” “” stubborn “” sunset “” sunset “” sunset “” sunset “warning.
“The Court finally determines that government actions on that day demonstrate an intentional contempt for its order, enough for the court to conclude that there is a probable cause to find the criminal government,” said Boasberg.
Boasberg said he will give government officials the opportunity to propose “other methods” to comply, which he will evaluate.
The Department of Justice tells the federal judge that he could invoke the State Secrets Law on the case of high profile deportation

The Salvadoran Minister of Justice and Public Security Héctor Villatoro, aiming, accompanies the Secretary of National Security Kristi name on a tour of the Terrorist Confinement Center in Tecoluca, El Salvador, March 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
Boasberg had scolded the Trump administration, including the lawyer of the Department of Justice, Drew Ensign, for not complying with repeated requests for information from the court on the deported persons on flights, and who in the administration knew about the restriction.
The lack of information provided had caused frustration of Boasberg, who described compliance last month in an abrasing order as “unfortunately insufficient.”
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The Trump administration, meanwhile, had argued in an previous emergency appeal that Boasberg’s actions were equivalent to a “massive and unauthorized imposition to the Executive’s authority to eliminate dangerous aliens”, whom they “posed” to those who “pose” those who “pose.” The American people. “
“If I really believed that everything you did that day was legal and would survive a judicial challenge, I would not have operated as you did,” Boasberg told Ensign earlier this month.