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Court Orders DC Judge to End Criminal Contempt Inquiry Into Trump Officials Over Deportation Flights

 

Court Orders DC Judge to End Criminal Contempt Inquiry Into Trump Officials Over Deportation Flights

April 15, 20268 min readBy Staff Reporter

A divided federal appeals court has ordered U.S. District Judge James Boasberg to shut down his criminal contempt investigation into senior Trump administration officials — a significant legal victory for the White House in one of the most closely watched immigration battles in recent U.S. history.

Key Facts at a Glance

The DC Circuit Court ruled 2-1 to block Judge Boasberg's contempt probe.

The case stems from the Trump administration's March 2025 use of the 1798 Alien Enemies Act to deport over 130 Venezuelan migrants to El Salvador.

Majority judges Neomi Rao and Justin Walker — both Trump appointees — called the probe a "clear abuse of discretion."

Judge Michelle Childs (Biden appointee) dissented in an 80-page opinion.

The ACLU said it plans to challenge the ruling before the full DC Circuit.

Background: What Led to the Contempt Inquiry?

In March 2025, the Trump administration invoked the Alien Enemies Act — an 18th-century wartime authority — to rapidly deport hundreds of Venezuelan nationals, who the government accused of gang membership with Tren de Aragua, to El Salvador. The men were subsequently imprisoned in El Salvador's notorious CECOT megaprison.

Judge Boasberg issued an emergency oral order during fast-moving legal proceedings demanding that the deportation flights turn around. The flights continued anyway. Boasberg later found probable cause that the government had committed criminal contempt by defying his directive.

The Appeals Court's Decision

On Tuesday, April 14, 2026, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit voted 2-1 to permanently end Boasberg's contempt inquiry. The majority, written by Circuit Judges Neomi Rao and Justin Walker, argued that the probe amounted to an unacceptable intrusion into executive branch decision-making on matters of national security and foreign policy.

The court pointed out a key procedural distinction: Boasberg's oral order during the emergency hearing did not explicitly bar officials from transferring migrants to Salvadoran custody — that instruction only appeared in a later written order issued after the hearing ended. The majority concluded that criminal liability cannot hinge on what a judge intended to say but did not formally state.

The court wrote that probing "high-level Executive Branch deliberations about matters of national security and diplomacy" constituted a "clear abuse of discretion" — and that such an investigation was a "legal dead end."

The Dissent: A Blow to the Rule of Law?

Judge Michelle Childs, appointed by President Biden, sharply disagreed. In a nearly 80-page dissent, she argued that contempt proceedings exist not for a court's vanity, but to preserve and enforce the law. She warned that the majority's decision would echo far beyond this case, undermining courts' ability to hold any litigant — including the executive branch — accountable for defying judicial orders.

ACLU attorney Lee Gelernt, the lead counsel for the deported migrants, called the ruling a "blow to the rule of law," saying there was "no longer any question" that the Trump administration had willfully violated the court's order.

What Happens Next?

The ACLU has indicated it will petition the full DC Circuit to review the three-judge panel's decision. Meanwhile, the Venezuelan men at the center of the litigation were released from CECOT last summer as part of a U.S.-brokered prisoner swap and returned to Venezuela.

Separately, Boasberg has ordered the Trump administration to give some of those migrants an opportunity to contest their removal under the Alien Enemies Act — a matter currently under review by the DC Circuit as well.


Why This Ruling Matters

The decision is one of the most consequential clashes between the federal judiciary and the executive branch in recent memory. At its core, the case raises a fundamental question: what happens when the executive branch defies a court order — and can courts enforce their own authority against the president?

By halting the contempt inquiry, the appeals court has — at least for now — shielded senior officials like then-Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and top Justice Department attorneys from being compelled to testify under oath about the administration's decision-making that night in March 2025.

For immigration advocates, the ruling removes a layer of judicial accountability at a moment when the administration continues to push the boundaries of executive power on immigration enforcement. For the Trump administration, it is a vindication that the courts cannot second-guess national security and foreign policy decisions belonging to the president.

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