Heck. even his appointees are getting tired of administration lawyers lying in Court:
"Shortly before 1 a.m. on Saturday, the Supreme Court issued an emergency order halting the Trump administration’s reported efforts to fly Venezuelan migrants to an El Salvador prison before they could challenge their deportation. The court’s late-night intervention is an extraordinary and highly unusual rebuke to the government, one that may well mark a turning point in the majority’s approach to this administration. For months, SCOTUS has given the government every benefit of the doubt, accepting the Justice Department’s dubious assertions and awarding Trump immense deference. On Saturday, however, a majority of justices signaled that they no longer trust the administration to comply with the law, including the court’s own rulings. If that is indeed the case, we are likely careening toward a head-on conflict between the president and the court, with foundational principles of constitutional democracy hanging in the balance.
SCOTUS’s emergency order in A.A.R.P. v. Trump arose out of the government’s unlawful efforts to ship Venezuelan migrants to a Salvadoran prison by invoking the Alien Enemies Act of 1798. On Thursday, lawyers for these individuals told a federal court that the government was preparing to summarily deport them to El Salvador, where they would be indefinitely confined at a notorious detention center. A federal judge in the Southern District of Texas had already blocked their removal—but the government sought to evade this order by busing the migrants into the Northern District of Texas, where the restraining order would not apply. It then gave these migrants “notices,” in English only, declaring that they would be deported immediately, without stating that they could contest their deportations in court. (Officials refused to give these notices, or any other information, to the migrants’ lawyers.) The government intended to fly them out of the country within 24 hours, according to court filings.
This conduct flagrantly violated the Supreme Court’s decision from just 12 days ago affording the migrants substantial due process protections. The court unanimously agreed that these individuals “must receive notice” that “they are subject to removal,” and that this notice “must be afforded within a reasonable time and in such a manner as will allow them to actually seek” relief. Obviously, giving Spanish speakers a barebones “notice” in English that they will be deported does not comply with this mandate. But when the migrants’ attorneys sought court intervention, the Justice Department responded as it so often does these days: by lying. Despite extensive evidence to the contrary, DOJ lawyers told multiple courts that they did not intend to deport migrants on Friday or Saturday, and that they would not deport anyone without affording them the due process guaranteed by SCOTUS. Two different federal judges declined to step in on Friday night, finding they did not have authority to do so.
The ACLU then begged the Supreme Court for help. And the court obliged. The majority directed the government “not to remove” any of the individuals seeking relief “until further order of this court.” As a result, the government was unable to deport the migrants to El Salvador—as it appeared about to do—and they remain in U.S. custody. Only Justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas noted their dissents.
There are three remarkable aspects of the court’s decision. First, it acted with startling speed—so quickly, in fact, that it published the order before Alito could finish writing his dissent; he was forced to note only that a “statement” would “follow.” It is a major breach of protocol for the Supreme Court to publish an order or opinion before a dissenting justice finishes writing their opinion, one that reflects the profound urgency of the situation. Relatedly, awkward phrasing in court’s order may imply that Alito—who first received the plaintiffs’ request—failed to refer it to the full court, as is custom, compelling the other justices to rip the case away from him. No matter what, exactly, happened behind the scenes, it’s clear that a majority would not let Alito hold up speedy action. It also acted before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit had a chance to step in, and before the Department of Justice had an opportunity to respond to the plaintiffs. These highly abnormal moves also reveal a desire to act fast.
Second, it is plain as day that the Supreme Court simply did not trust the Trump administration’s claims that it would not deport migrants over the weekend without due process. If the court did believe these representations, it would not have acted in such a rapid and dramatic fashion; it could have waited for the lower courts to sort through the matter, confident no one would face irreparable harm in the meantime. The majority’s decision to wade in straightaway points to a skepticism that the Justice Department was telling the truth. It’s damning, too, that the majority did not even wait for DOJ to file a brief with the court before acting. The only plausible explanation for the court’s order is that a majority feared the government would whisk away the migrants to El Salvador if it did not intervene immediately. That fear is well-grounded, since we now have substantial evidence that the government lied to a federal judge last month to thwart a court order stopping deportation flights.
Finally, and perhaps most obviously, it’s critical that only Thomas and Alito noted their dissents. When the court takes emergency action, justices don’t have to note their votes, but they usually do; we can probably assume that this order was 7–2. That would mean that Chief Justice John Roberts—along Justices Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett—joined this rebuke to the Trump administration. Until now, all of these justices have, to varying degrees, treated the president with kid gloves, handing him a series of narrow wins on procedural grounds that avoided direct collision between the branches. That accommodation came to an abrupt stop on Saturday."
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/the-supreme-court-s-late-night-rebuke-to-trump-is-extraordinary-in-more-ways-than-one/ar-AA1DfxwG?ocid=BingNewsSerp
The Order is here: https://www.supremecourt.gov/orders/courtorders/041925zr_c18e.pdf
@no1marauder said"Second, it is plain as day that the Supreme Court simply did not trust the Trump administration’s claims that it would not deport migrants over the weekend without due process. "
Heck. even his appointees are getting tired of administration lawyers lying in Court:
"Shortly before 1 a.m. on Saturday, the Supreme Court issued an emergency order halting the Trump administration’s reported efforts to fly Venezuelan migrants to an El Salvador prison before they could challenge their deportation. The court’s late-night intervention is an extraordinar ...[text shortened]... BingNewsSerp
The Order is here: https://www.supremecourt.gov/orders/courtorders/041925zr_c18e.pdf
it is not the courts jurisdiction to determine if someone may or may not violate a law.
@Mott-The-Hoople saidThe Government's previous bad faith in immigration cases is surely relevant in determining whether a restraining order should be granted. Their lawyers would not commit to not shipping out members of the class sought to be certified on Saturday, so their was no reason to believe they were in compliance with the previous SCOTUS decision as they claimed. Apparently, the administration was willing to argue that their notice in English to primarily Spanish speaking detainees which contained no information as to how to contest removal was sufficient to meet the requirements the SCOTUS had already given for notice and an adequate chance to file a habeas corpus petition and when that failed to assert there was nothing that could be done even if the removals violated the order because the detainees were now in El Salvadoran custody (at US expense BTW).
"Second, it is plain as day that the Supreme Court simply did not trust the Trump administration’s claims that it would not deport migrants over the weekend without due process. "
it is not the courts jurisdiction to determine if someone may or may not violate a law.
The SCOTUS, including Trump's own appointees, were clearly not willing to let the administration play such a duplicitous game.
@Mott-The-Hoople saidWhat do you think a restraining order is?
"Second, it is plain as day that the Supreme Court simply did not trust the Trump administration’s claims that it would not deport migrants over the weekend without due process. "
it is not the courts jurisdiction to determine if someone may or may not violate a law.
@Mott-The-Hoople saidHeck, the DOJ fired a lawyer for telling the truth in the Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia case. https://www.cnn.com/2025/04/15/politics/doj-fires-immigration-lawyer-who-argued-abrego-garcia-case-source-says/index.html
"Second, it is plain as day that the Supreme Court simply did not trust the Trump administration’s claims that it would not deport migrants over the weekend without due process. "
it is not the courts jurisdiction to determine if someone may or may not violate a law.
@Mott-The-Hoople saidHAHAHA your a moron.
"Second, it is plain as day that the Supreme Court simply did not trust the Trump administration’s claims that it would not deport migrants over the weekend without due process. "
it is not the courts jurisdiction to determine if someone may or may not violate a law.
@no1marauder saidThe lower court has never ruled, scotus violated their own rules
The Government's previous bad faith in immigration cases is surely relevant in determining whether a restraining order should be granted. Their lawyers would not commit to not shipping out members of the class sought to be certified on Saturday, so their was no reason to believe they were in compliance with the previous SCOTUS decision as they claimed. Apparently, the adm ...[text shortened]... p's own appointees, were clearly not willing to let the administration play such a duplicitous game.
@Mott-The-Hoople saidFunny, that is not what the constitution says, ever hear of the phrase DUE PROCESS?
"Second, it is plain as day that the Supreme Court simply did not trust the Trump administration’s claims that it would not deport migrants over the weekend without due process. "
it is not the courts jurisdiction to determine if someone may or may not violate a law.
Don't know what school YOU flunked out of but it IS the courts who decide if laws are broken not a would be king.
@Mott-The-Hoople saidYeah, but he has at least a CHANCE of getting straight, something you NEVER will achieve in terms of mental ability.
Hahaha, you are a queer moron 😉
You are stupid and will remain that all your life.
@Mott-The-Hoople saidAnd you should know. Tell me, how did it feel the first time? Was it rape or did you go along with it?
There is no “getting straight” once you have allowed another man to enter your body.
It doesn't matter, YOU are STUPID and ALWAYS was and ALWAYS WILL BE.
You couldn't think your way out of a wet paper bag. At least you seem to be learning a bit about chess, your rating is up.
@sonhouse said“At least you seem to be learning a bit about chess, your rating is up.”
And you should know. Tell me, how did it feel the first time? Was it rape or did you go along with it?
It doesn't matter, YOU are STUPID and ALWAYS was and ALWAYS WILL BE.
You couldn't think your way out of a wet paper bag. At least you seem to be learning a bit about chess, your rating is up.
Why are you stalking me?
I beat you!
I also offered you another game, you were too scared to play!
That’s the facts jack! 😂
@Mott-The-Hoople saidYou really think winning one game means you are beating me? I TOLD you I had not played a single game in years but you don't care about that.
“At least you seem to be learning a bit about chess, your rating is up.”
Why are you stalking me?
I beat you!
I also offered you another game, you were too scared to play!
That’s the facts jack! 😂
After your game I went to our local club and in a quad I played against 2 1600's and a 1700 player and got equal, one loss and one win and one draw which was literally my first OTB play in years so don't think you are automatically stronger because you won one time.
I THOUGHT bringing up your new rating would have been a compliment but you take one win and just ASSUME that makes you stronger.
Try a TWENTY game series, THAT says who is stronger.
A game with regular time, 3/7, not some deal with two days to play or you lose.
I am working now and can't play those time frames designed to take advantage of folks who cannot find the time to play every day and you knew that full well.
You are studying that is clear or you would not be advancing but so have I.
When I worked in Thailand at NKP Air Force base, working on a microwave comm site, 12 hour shifts I went through every game in both books by Euwe, dyamanic and static chess, two books by the former world champ because there was seldom anything to do other than the daily calibration and one BIG repair in 2 years. So it left a LOT of time to go over every game, the only bad part of that series was in old notation, Pawn to King FOUR and such instead of Algebraic which is a LOT easier to study.
But I did it anyway and went up 300 points.
That is what it takes to get stronger.