Litigation intensifies over Trump's Alien Enemies Act deportations

Legal challenges stemming from a March 2025 deportation of over 250 migrant men to El Salvador are reaching key milestones in US courts. Despite a temporary restraining order, the Trump administration proceeded with the transfers, raising questions about due process and court authority. ACLU attorneys continue to litigate the cases amid concerns over the wartime powers of the Alien Enemies Act.

In mid-March 2025, ACLU attorney Lee Gelernt and his team learned of plans by the Trump administration for what they described as a lawless operation targeting migrant men. The scheme involved secret flights from Texas to the CECOT facility in El Salvador, labeled a torture prison, with no regard for due process. On a Saturday night, the lawyers secured a temporary restraining order from District Judge James Boasberg in Washington, DC, but it failed to halt the events of March 15, when more than 250 men were renditioned abroad.

These incidents have sparked ongoing litigation that probes the boundaries of executive power. The cases address whether the antiquated Alien Enemies Act, a wartime statute, can be applied to individuals the government views as domestic threats. Central issues include the Trump Department of Justice's obligation to obey court orders, the role of district courts in compelling fact-finding assistance from officials like Attorney General Pam Bondi, and the enduring validity of due process and habeas corpus protections.

As discussed in a recent Slate podcast, the outcomes could shape the remainder of Trump's term, determining if such statutes enable unchecked deportations and defiance of judicial directives. The litigation, though overshadowed by other news, underscores foundational tensions between liberty and national security in the current administration.

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Illustration of the U.S. Supreme Court building with podcast elements and tariff documents, symbolizing a podcast episode on legal challenges to Trump administration policies.
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Amicus episode spotlights lower-court pushback and a looming Supreme Court tariff fight

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In a Nov. 1, 2025 episode of Slate’s Amicus, host Dahlia Lithwick examines how lower federal courts are confronting key Trump administration moves—on due process and domestic deployments—and previews this week’s Supreme Court arguments over the president’s “Liberation Day” tariffs. According to Slate, the episode also features Rick Woldenberg, CEO of Learning Resources, a lead plaintiff in the tariff challenge.

The case of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who was erroneously deported to El Salvador despite a court order, has spotlighted growing errors in U.S. immigration removals. Lawyers report a surge in similar wrongful deportations as the administration pursues aggressive targets. Advocates attribute the mistakes to the haste of operations, raising concerns over legal protections for immigrants.

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Immigration courts in the United States are seeing a sharp rise in absent migrants, resulting in over 310,000 deportation orders issued in fiscal year 2025. This surge follows the Trump administration's reversal of a Biden-era policy that had allowed many cases to be dismissed. Experts attribute the no-shows to policy changes and increased arrests at court proceedings.

A federal judge in Maryland has temporarily barred immigration officials from re-detaining Kilmar Abrego Garcia, one day after she ordered him freed from an ICE facility in Pennsylvania, amid an escalating legal fight over his deportation and detention.

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The US Supreme Court has preliminarily rejected President Donald Trump's attempt to deploy National Guard troops to Chicago to support immigration operations. This ruling marks a significant setback for the Republican administration, which sought to use military forces in Democratic-led cities. The justices cited legal restrictions like the Posse Comitatus Act in denying the request.

U.S. District Judge Beryl A. Howell has ruled that immigration officers in the District of Columbia must have probable cause before carrying out warrantless arrests, a decision that reins in aggressive enforcement tactics and pointedly questions a recent Supreme Court order that expanded immigration ‘roving patrols’ elsewhere.

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A federal judge in New York has sharply criticized Immigration and Customs Enforcement for deceptive practices and brutal confinement of a detainee. In a detailed ruling, Judge Gary R. Brown ordered the release of Erron Anthony Clarke, citing violations that shock the conscience. The decision highlights growing judicial frustration with federal agents' conduct in immigration cases.

 

 

 

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