A rare authorized showdown befell final weekend over President Donald Trump’s invocation of an 18th century wartime act to deport a whole lot of immigrants, most of them Venezuelans, to a jail in El Salvador.
It concerned a collection of authorized filings, White Home bulletins, court docket hearings, deportation flights and a mocking social media submit from a Central American chief who proudly calls himself the “world’s coolest dictator.”
Here’s a timeline of occasions surrounding the invocation of the Alien Enemies Act. All occasions are japanese.
Saturday, March 15
2:16 a.m.: Two authorized advocacy teams — the ACLU and Democracy Ahead — file go well with on behalf of 5 Venezuelans held in immigration detention who worry they’ll be falsely labeled members of the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua and deported beneath the Alien Enemies Act, which attorneys count on to be invoked quickly.
9:40 a.m.: Choose James E. Boasberg points a brief restraining order stopping the federal government from deporting the 5 plaintiffs. He schedules a 5 p.m. listening to on whether or not to increase it. The Trump administration swiftly appeals the order.
Roughly 4 p.m.: The White Home posts the order invoking the Alien Enemies Act.
5 p.m.: Boasberg convenes a listening to and asks the federal government legal professional, Deputy Assistant Legal professional Normal Drew Ensign, if the federal government plans to deport anybody beneath Trump’s new proclamation “within the subsequent 24 or 48 hours.” Ensign says he doesn’t know and asks for time to search out out, because the ACLU warns planes are apparently about to depart. Boasberg offers Ensign about 40 minutes to search out out and recesses the listening to at 5:22 pm.
5:26 p.m.: An airplane with the tail quantity N278GX, believed by activists to be carrying deportees, leaves Harlingen, Texas, close to the border with Mexico, in response to the flight monitoring web site FlightAware.
5:45 p.m.: One other airplane with the tail quantity N837VA, believed by activists to be carrying deportees, departs Harlingen.
About 5:55 p.m.: Boasberg reconvenes the listening to. Ensign says he nonetheless has no specifics. The ACLU once more warns that planes are leaving. Boasberg says he has to subject a brand new order to keep away from anybody being instantly deported.
Round 6:45 p.m.: Boasberg tells Ensign: “Inform your purchasers of this instantly, and that any aircraft containing these of us that’s going to take off or is within the air must be returned to the USA.” He verbally points his order, which stands for 14 days, and notes that immigrants protected by it is going to stay in U.S. custody.
7:26 p.m.: Boasberg’s written order is launched.
7:36 p.m.: The aircraft with the tail quantity N278GX lands in Honduras.
7:37 p.m.: An airplane with the tail quantity N630VA, believed by activists to be carrying deportees, departs Harlingen.
8:02 p.m. The aircraft with the tail quantity N837VA lands in El Salvador.
9:46 p.m.: The aircraft with the tail quantity N630VA arrives in Honduras.
10:41 p.m.: The aircraft with the tail quantity N278GX departs Honduras.
Sunday, March 16:
12:05 a.m.: The aircraft with the tail quantity N278GX arrives in El Salvador.
12:41 a.m.: The aircraft with the tail quantity N630VA leaves Honduras.
1:03 a.m.: The aircraft with the tail quantity N630VA arrives in El Salvador.
7:46 a.m.: El Salvador’s president, Nayib Bukele, tweets a New York Submit headline saying Boasberg had ordered planes rotated and provides “Oopsie … Too late” and a laughing/crying emoji.
8:13 a.m.: Bukele tweets footage of the deportees arriving and being processed into his nation’s showcase prison.
8:39 a.m.: U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio posts Bukele’s tweet.
9:29 a.m.: White Home Communications director recirculates Bukele’s laughing submit
Monday, March 17
5 p.m.: A listening to begins over what Boasberg has known as the “doable defiance” of his court docket order. Trump administration attorneys inform Boasberg that his verbal instructions didn’t rely, solely his written order wanted to be adopted, that it couldn’t apply to flights exterior the U.S. and that they might not reply his questions concerning the journeys resulting from nationwide safety points. Boasberg calls the arguments “one heck of a stretch.” Lee Gelernt of the ACLU, the lead legal professional for the plaintiffs, warns that “I believe we’re getting very shut” to a constitutional disaster.
Related Press author Tim Sullivan contributed.