
DOJ insists El Salvador deportation flights did not violate court order
Fox News
Deportation flights that sent Venezuelan nationals to El Salvador Saturday did not violate a court order, according to the Justice Department.
"The Court... ordered the Government to address the form in which it can provide further details about flights that left the United States before 7:25 PM," reads a filing Tuesday that was co-signed by Attorney General Pamela Bondi, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche and others. "The Government maintains that there is no justification to order the provision of additional information, and that doing so would be inappropriate, because even accepting Plaintiffs’ account of the facts, there was no violation of the Court’s written order (since the relevant flights left U.S. airspace, and so their occupants were ‘removed,’ before the order issued), and the Court’s earlier oral statements were not independently enforceable as injunctions." Greg Norman is a reporter at Fox News Digital.
Boasberg on Tuesday ordered the Justice Department to answer five other questions, submitting declarations to him under seal by noon on Wednesday: "1) What time did the plane take off from U.S. soil and from where? 2) What time did it leave U.S. airspace? 3) What time did it land in which foreign country (including if it made more than one stop)? 4) What time were individuals subject solely to the Proclamation transferred out of U.S. custody? and 5) How many people were aboard solely on the basis of the Proclamation?"
In granting the emergency order Saturday, Boasberg sided with the plaintiffs – Democracy Forward and the ACLU – who had argued that the deportations would likely pose imminent and "irreparable" harm to the migrants under the time proposed.

Republicans eviscerate Schumer for 'mocking hardworking Americans' on 'The View': 'Seriously Chuck?'
Republicans criticized Sen. Chuck Schumer on social media for saying he wakes up at 3 am "worried about the future of the country under these oligarchs."