‘Criminal contempt’: US judge slam the Trump administration to deport Venezuela despite a court order

Venezuela migrants were deported from the United States

An American federal judge said on Wednesday that he found the administration of President Donald Trump “potential cause” to “criminal contempt” in “criminal contempt”, which despite issuing a temporary reforming order to the alleged gangs of Venezuela to prevent allevador to alleged gangs of Venezuela.
The news agency AFP reported that in a written opinion, District Judge James Boseberg cited the “evidence” of the federal government, which moves forward with flights despite the orders to go on to “deliberately or careless neglect” and move forward with flights.
Boseberg wrote, “Defendants did not give any concrete reason to avoid the conclusion, which seems clearly that they deliberately portrayed the written order and separate, its oral command clearly depicted its oral command whether compliance was done.”
The judge said, “The administration’s action was enough to conclude that there is a possible reason to find the government in criminal contempt.”
However, Boseberg gave the Trump administration a last chance to “purify such contempt” or to face further court action.
The judge issued a temporary prevention order on 15 March to prevent exile under the 1798 Alien Shatru Act. The vague warfare law removes the general legal fixed process.
White House has planned ‘Tatki’ appeal
The White House said that it would file a “immediate” appeal for the decision by the District Judge.
“We are planning to plan immediate appellate relief immediately after the ruling director Steven Chewing, the Director of Communications of the White House. The President is 100 percent committed to ensure that terrorists and criminal illegal migrants are no longer a threat to Americans and their communities across the country.”
The Foreign Enemies Act was used only during the War of 1812, during the First World War and Second World War; Trump said that he was targeting the “transnational gang”, he had declared foreign terrorist organizations.
These included the group of Venezuela train de Argua, but many exiled Venezuela lawyers refused their customers to gang members, and said that they had not committed any crime and were largely targeted on their tattoo. “

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