The White House says it will appeal the decision that the Administration breached the court order on deportation flights.
A judge in the United States has said that there is a “probable cause” to keep the administration of the president of the United States, Donald Trump, in criminal contempt for not taking into account his order to change deportation flights to El Salvador.
In a ruling written on Wednesday, the United States District Judge James Boasberg said the Trump administration had shown “intentional contempt” for its March 15 ruling that the Government could not deport alleging alleging members of Venezuelan gangs under a 18th -century war law without giving them the opportunity to challenge their elimination.
The actions of the Trump administration were “enough for the court to conclude that there is a probable cause to find the government in criminal contempt,” Boasberg said in his 46 -page ruling.
“The court does not reach such a conclusion lightly or hurriedly; in fact, it has given the defendants a wide opportunity to rectify or explain their actions,” Boasberg added.
“None of his answers has been satisfactory.”
Boasberg said the administration still had the opportunity to avoid being despised if it allowed the deportees to oppose their removals in court.
The White House communications director Steven Cheung said the administration would appeal the ruling.
“The president is 100 percent committed to ensuring that terrorists and illegal criminal migrants are no longer a threat to Americans and their communities throughout the country,” said Cheung published on social networks.
Boasberg’s ruling is the closest that any court has been suggesting that Trump administration officials could be punished for controversial deportation flights.
The Trump Administration has deported 238 migrants who affirms that they are members of the Venezuelan gang Train El Aragua to El Salvador, where they have bone confined in the center for the confinement of terrorism, a prison of 40,000 capacity.
American officials have published few evidence to support their gang membership claims, and US media have reported that it is not public information that suggests that any less a small minority of the deportees has a criminal record.
Trump has invoked the Alien enemies law of 1798, which grants the authority of the president of the United States to stop or deport non -citizens who carry out war times, to carry out deportations.
Critics have condemned the use of the law, arguing that the United States is not jokingly under any threat of “invasion” as results of being at war.