WASHINGTON (AP) β The Justice Department asked an appeals court Friday toΒ block a contempt investigationΒ of the Trump administration for failing to turn aroundΒ planes carrying Venezuelan migrants to El SalvadorΒ in March.
The department also is seeking Chief Judge James Boasbergβs removal from the case, accusing him of a βradical, retaliatory, unconstitutional campaignβ against the Trump administration.
It marks a dramatic escalation in the Justice Departmentβs lengthy feud with the judge appointed to the bench by Democratic President Barack Obama, setting the stage for a showdown over the judiciaryβs power to serve as a check on an administration that has pushed the boundaries of court orders.
The department asked the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit to rule on its requests before Monday, when Boasberg is scheduled to hear testimony from a former government attorney who filedΒ a whistleblower complaint.
A three-judge panel from the appeals court agreed to temporarily suspend Boasberg’s contempt-related order. The panel, composed of two judges nominated by Trump and one nominated by Democratic President Joe Biden, said its administrative stay isn’t a ruling on the merits of the government’s requests. But it casts some doubt on whether Monday’s hearing will proceed as planned.
Department officials claim Boasberg is biased and creating “a circus that threatens the separation of powers and the attorney-client privilege alike.β
βThe forthcoming hearing has every appearance of an endless fishing expedition aimed at an ever-widening list of witnesses and prolonged testimony. That spectacle is not a genuine effort to uncover any relevant facts,β they wrote.
Boasberg has said that a recent ruling by the appeals court gave him the authority to proceed with the contempt inquiry. The judge is trying determine if there is sufficient evidence to refer the matter for prosecution.
Boasberg, who has been chief judge of the district court in Washington, D.C., since March 2023, has said the Trump administration may have βacted in bad faithβ by trying to rush Venezuelan migrants out of the country in defiance of his order blocking their deportations to El Salvador.
In anΒ April 16 order, the judge said he gave the administration βample opportunity to rectify or explain their actions” but concluded that βnone of their responses has been satisfactory.”
βThe Constitution does not tolerate willful disobedience of judicial orders β especially by officials of a coordinate branch who have sworn an oath to uphold it,β Boasberg wrote.
The Trump administration has denied any violation, saying the judgeβs March 15 directive to return the planes was made verbally in court but not included in his written order.
Trump called for impeaching Boasberg in March. In July, the Justice Department filed a misconduct complaint accusing Boasberg of making improper public comments about Trump and his administration.
In a social media post Friday, Attorney General Pam Bondi accused Boasberg of engaging in βlawless judicial activism.β
βThis radical, retaliatory, unconstitutional campaign against the Trump Administration will not stand,βΒ Bondi wrote.
Boasberg has scheduled a hearing Monday for testimony by former Justice Department attorney Erez Reuveni, whose whistleblower complaint claims a top department official suggested the Trump administration might have to ignore court orders as it prepared to deport Venezuelan migrants.
The judge also scheduled a hearing Tuesday for testimony by Deputy Assistant Attorney General Drew Ensign. The Justice Department has said Ensign conveyed Boasbergβs March 15 oral order and a subsequent written order to the Department of Homeland Security.
βThis long-running saga never should have begun; should not have continued at all after this Courtβs last intervention; and certainly should not be allowed to escalate into the unseemly and unnecessary interbranch conflict that it now imminently portends,β department officials said in Friday’s court filing.
In a written declaration to the court, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said she made the decision not to return the planes to the U.S. after receiving βprivileged legal adviceβ from the Homeland Security Departmentβs acting general counsel and βthrough him from the senior leadership of the Department of Justice.β
Boasberg called Noemβs declaration βcursoryβ and said it doesn’t provide him with enough information to determine whether she willfully violated his March 15 order.
Boasberg on Friday refused to cancel or delay next weekβs hearings.
βTo begin, this inquiry is not some academic exercise,β he wrote. βApproximately 137 men were spirited out of this country without a hearing and placed in a high-security prison in El Salvador, where many suffered abuse and possible torture, despite this Courtβs order that they should not be disembarked.β
