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The 4th US Circuit Court of Appeals declined to lift the order on the executive to "facilitate" the return of Abrego Garcia and I recommend reading it
It's written up by judge James Wilkinson III, a Reagan appointee and Bush era short list candidate for the supreme court and he's quite well respected in the legal profession. This guy has been a conservative for longer than many people here have even been alive, and the stance of seasoned judicial figures like him with old style "respectable" political ideologies are an interesting way to see the change in the rest of politics.
Most importantly in that it incidentally addresses many of the questions and concerns people have about this whole situation.
Like does it matter whether or not the executive's allegations against Garcia are correct?
What does the Supreme Court's decision actually say?
An interesting difference between the role of the executive and the rule of the judiciary
Are the claims that this could be used on citizens valid?
On the contradictions between both government's public claims of authority and/or responsibility.
Are there previous major examples of an executive following a court order it did not like?
And if you're wondering "Why do the courts even get a say here to begin with about the executive's actions?", here's a basic primer.
Exactly what due process do people think was missed? The guy had multiple days in court, and had a standing deportation order, no? If the government managed to bring him back, sticks him before an immigration judge who says "Your asylum claims are no longer valid due to changed facts on the ground, assuming they ever were, it's fine to execute the deportation order to El Salvador", then is everyone who is upset about this going to nod sagaciously and be satisfied that due process was followed? If they get him out of El Salvador and dump him six feet across the border in Honduras, does that fix everything?
How much due process in general needs to be given to each of the 10-30 million illegal immigrants? There was certainly no due processes when they came in; can we hold the entire Biden administration and Democrat party in contempt?
Back to Garcia, what "options" remain after the government of El Salvador has declined to release him? Do the courts expect special forces to exfiltrate a foreign national from a foreign prison?
I'm honestly baffled how people justify this to themselves as anything other than naked "rules for thee but not for me". Does it actually feel, inside, like standing on principle and not just grasping at any procedural trick at hand?
Let whosoever among you has demanded prosecution for Blue State governors who ignore the clear and plain SC rulings on the 2nd Amendment be the first to speak up.
Arguments surrounding the guy's immigration status are irrelevant here. At no point has the administration argued that its obligations would be any different were he an American citizen; it's taken a firm stance that the court has no authority to compel the executive to return someone held by a foreign government. Period. If the court sides with the administration, there's nothing preventing Trump from deciding that it's easier to send a high-profile citizen criminal to El Salvador than to provide the due process the law affords him. And who is going to argue? After all, there was certainly no due process provided to the victims of his crimes. At that point, 200 years of constitutional law will go down the toilet. Every citizen is entitled to due process, unless the government decides he isn't is not the hallmark of a free society.
If the issue under debate is due process, how can his immigration status be "irrelevant"? His immigration status is what determines how much process is due.
It may do, but even the Trump administration admits that the result of the due process he was entitled to has simply been ignored and now they say it doesn't matter because they have no obligations to someone in a foreign principle. The point is that the same logic could apply to citizens. Say a domestic citizen criminal is due to be deported to be held in a foreign prison, the judiciary decides this is not legal, but then the executive decides to do it anyway, the exact same logic Trump uses ('you can't compel us to take any action related to foreign policy') still applies and the citizen never returns.
What exactly does this mean to you? I feel like everyone arguing this is just treating "due process" as an incantation. The part of the process that was missed was that they were supposed to fill out an extra form before doing exactly what they did.
I'm fairly certain that this point "due process" has become "enough layers of review until my desired outcome is reached, and no more." Which isn't to say that due process isn't a good idea generally, but maybe we need pre-commitment to what the process should be, like we've started registering scientific studies to prevent cherry-picking results.
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