Law and Chaos
Law and Chaos

Ep 204 — Horsefeathers!

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Docket Alerts:Exactly zero grand jurors voted to indict the members of Congress who made a video in November reminding active duty service members of their duty to refuse illegal orders. And Judge Ric...

Transcript

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I mean, clearly this was an immigration drag net using these criminal warrant...

excuse to get around the Fourth Amendment so that they could search and detain hundreds of mostly Latino people, not of whom were suspected of actual crimes.

Yeah, I think it is worth starting the fact that ICE does not have general detention and arrest authority.

Welcome to Law and Chaos where the Trump administration is teaming up the global law enforcement to hunt immigrants and trial judges in Texas are finding work grounds for the Fifth Circuit's obscene rulings and Jeanine Piero is really, really bad at her job. We've got a lot to cover, so let's get after it.

Happy Fridaycast Monkeys, I'm Liz Diane with me as always is Andrew Torres, Andrew, how are you?

Hey, Liz, there's so much of everything all the time. I know, I know, I really feel like our brains are being wild. Like we really aren't set up psychologically to like not only have the and never ending stream of bad news, but haven't been fed to us all day long on social media. But you know, we we have some really good news stories to cover today. We've got positive development strip judges fighting back like absolutely it's not all doom and gloom. It's not all doom and gloom

and I really do think that people are going to need another Atari episode soon. Magic the gathering. Okay, all right, so we got another jam pack news day as you said, we'll talk about this fascinating case in Ohio where the ACLU is suing state and federal officials for conspiring to deny immigrants

their civil rights. It's it's a really important case when we've seen so many local officials

cooperating with ICE because local officials are vulnerable to section 1983 suits in ways that federal officials are not. We're going to talk about that. A Trump appointee in DC is barring the government from interning former death row inmates in supermax. That's a really good ruling. Like you said, we'll talk about the fallout from the Fifth Circuit's mandatory internment camp ruling last week and Andrew you listened to a hearing before judge on array as today on temporary protected status

for Haitian immigrants, which was also interesting for what it says about the court writ large. And for subscribers, we have more on pantbandies. One weird trick to get around senate

confirmation for use attorneys. But first, tacit alert. So beginning with a big

Mosul tub to Jeanine Piero, the US attorney for the District of Columbia, who once again continues to innovate the practice of law. We were speaking, of course, about our effort to indict six democratic members of Congress. Their crime was making a video in November reminding active duty members of the military that they have a right and indeed a duty to refuse to carry out a legal order. Yeah, and these legislators are all former members of the military or the intelligence community.

They are right morally. They are right legally. That's senators Mark Kelly and Alyssa Slotkin, along with representatives Jason Crowe, Maggie Goodlander, Chris Delusio, and Chrissy Hulley. So Donald Trump screeched onto social that that was seditious behavior punishable by death. And then Jeanine Piero tried to indict these legislators for something is it's not clear from the reporting exactly what? Yeah, well, whatever it is, she failed. And not just in the way

that we've come to expect like there is no prosecutor in history who gets no build more than Jeanine Piero. It is astonishing, particularly since grandjuries don't have to be unanimous.

You have to get 12 votes out of a potential 23 grandjurs. And you only have to convince them that

there was probable cause to believe that a crime has been committed. That is a much lower threshold than beyond a reasonable doubt that you need to win a trial. It's a lower threshold than just more likely than not. It's like 30% or so. Right. And Jeanine Piero's lawyers got zero votes. Yeah, not a single grandjurer voted to issue an indictment according to NBC. I don't know how that's possible. And how do we saw the names of the line prosecutors today. They were published by NBC.

How do those guys not immediately shave their heads and move to an ashram? A grandjuries man. Who would have thought that they would be this bull work against fascism? I am not even joking. Right. Six years ago I was doing a story on the incorporation doctrine and I read a bunch of law review articles that rather persuasively at the time suggested that grandjuries aren't even a substantive right. I mean, we've all heard the saying you can indict a ham sandwich.

Well, I don't know what. You basically have to retire that when it is yet another thing

That Donald Trump has broken out along with the presumption of regularity at ...

You know what I'm not mad about either of those things, right? Grandjuries should

serve as a check-on prosecutors, particularly when every other check-in balance has failed us.

And in related news, George Richard Leon and D.C. whacked a peat headset across the nose with a rolled-up newspaper and said, "Not on my watch." It should have rubbed his nose in it. Look, but I have to say that not on my watch is more or less a direct quote from Judge Leon's order. This is from Senator Mark Kelly's lawsuit to block-exet from reducing his rank and docking his retirement.

In addition to pursuing criminal charges, because of the video. Right. Right. So, on the very first page

of this 15-page order, Judge Leon says, Secretary Heggseth relies on the well-established doctrine that military service members enjoy less vigorous first amendment protections given the fundamental obligation for obedience and discipline in the armed forces. Okay? Unfortunately for Secretary Heggseth, no court has ever extended those principles to retired service members, much less a retired service member serving in Congress and exercising oversight responsibility over the military.

This court will not be the first to do so within it has one of 15 of his of Judge Leon's trademark exclamation point. He does use a lot of exclamation points, that's kind of his thing. But, but again, this is another old bull of the judiciary standing up through this entire fascism. Yeah, when you say old bull, Judge Leon was put on the bench by George W. Bush, he is,

I think fair to say, rapidly conservative. Yeah. Our buddy Kelma Klanan considers him the most

partisan Republican judge that he's ever appeared in front of right. And Judge Leon is plainly disgusted by this Republican administration's attack on the world. Yeah, I love when he says this

court has all it needs to conclude that defendants have trampled on Senator Kelma's first

amendment freedoms and threatened the constitutional liberties of millions of military retirees. After all, as Bob Dylan famously said, you don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows. To say the least, our retired veterans deserve more respect from their government and our Constitution demands. They receive it exclamation point. My mom says that sometimes. The Dylan part, not the stuff about the military retirees. Although, I am sure she would agree.

Hi, Mom. So, Judge Leon also used the term "horse feathers" in this opinion. It's a horse of fat. As in horse feathers, well Congress has chosen to apply the uniform code of military justice to military retirees, as well as active duty service members.

That choice has little bearing on the scope of the first amendment protection for retirees.

The first amendment is a limitation on the power of Congress, not the other way around. I cannot believe these assholes of the Trump administration are making me team Richard Leah. It's the strangest of bedfills. It's empty. I do wonder if he's going to be added to the list of judges to impeach which Pam Bondy and her haller monkeys are apparently compiling. Bloomberg and Reuters say that she's putting together a hit list for Congress. Okay, we could do an entire show on this.

We may want up. Yeah, I think it is illustrative. Really important point. And that is that none of this

is actually about convicting anyone for actual crunch, right? Which, by the way, is the actual job of the Department of Justice. And so look at these stunts lately. This administration is not going to convict Don Lemon for criminal journalism. They're not going to convict anyone for voter fraud in Foulton County, Georgia. They're not going to convict members of Congress for making a video. And they're not going to impeach judges just because they're on Trump's enemies list.

The Department of Justice is using wielding the prosecutorial power to inflict pain on Trump's enemies plain and simple bit the civilians, of course. But also the other branches of government. The Department of Justice is deliberately painting a target on the back of legislators. And it is such a gross abusive power. Yeah, we're going to talk about that a fair bit when we get to judge Reyes is curing today. We'll talk about it at the end of the show. But I agree that the Trump

administration is basically in a war with judiciary, right? Everything but the Supreme Court on the Fifth Circuit. And that's one of the reasons we keep covering this dispute over the U.S. attorneys because having failed to bully the Senate into getting rid of the blue slip rule and confirming his cronies as chief prosecutors in the blue states where, where his enemies tend to live, Pam Bondi and Donald Trump are now trying to bully the judiciary into doing it for them.

Yeah, we've talked a lot about Trump's hack attorneys Lindsay Halligan and Alina Hava trying to hang on as de facto U.S. attorneys in Virginia and New Jersey, respectively, despite the Senate's refusal to confirm them. Under the blue slip rule, district court and U.S.

Attorney nominees don't move forward without a sign off from the home state s...

which means Trump can't get his worst cronies confirmed as chief prosecutor in the states where his enemies tend to live. Pam Bondi has spent a year trying to get around this despite

every court to have considered the question and I believe it's seven at our last count,

telling her no, right? No court has ever endorsed any of the theories that she is put for. Right, so there is another way besides Senate confirmation for these attorneys to get confirmed. Congress passed a law allowing district judges to fill U.S. attorney vacancies when there is no confirmed nominee that last 28 U.S. C. Section 546 D. And this week, the judges in the Northern District of New York did just that. A month ago, Trump's crony john sarconi was disqualified by

yet another court. And yesterday, the judges appointed Donald Kinsela, a very experienced lawyer to head up the U.S. attorney's office in Albany as interim U.S. attorney. Kinsela has 50 years, literally 50 years practicing law much of it at the U.S. attorney's office in the Northern

District of New York. Unlike sarconi, Trump's crony who never worked as a prosecutor until

Trump tapped him for this job so that he could use subpoena power in that office to harass

New York attorney general literature James. And to illustrate whether this administration values competence or loyalty five hours later, the DOJ fired Kinsela, right? Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanch, one of Trump's many, many personal lawyers who are now running the Justice Department, tweeted out judges don't pick U.S. attorneys, the president of the United States does see article two of our Constitution, you are fired Donald Kinsela. Yeah, Todd Blanch presiding

over this wholesale assault on the first fourth and fifth amendments, lecturing other people about Constitution. How does it go? Is quite a thing. Yeah, especially since Blanch left out that part where the Constitution says with the advice and consent of the Senate, right? Like, Trump can nominate principal officers, but he can't just install them by executive fiat, right? It is Congress

and the judges who are acting legally here, but the president is not, again, as every court

to consider these questions has always ruled. Yeah, this issue is not going to go away. Yeah,

especially because the judges in New Jersey put out a request for candidates to lead the U.S. Attorney's office in New Jersey, right? So they want to do the same thing that just just happened in New York and the Trump administration immediately asked the competent candidate there. So presumably that's what's going to happen if they hire anybody in New Jersey. Yeah. And there's actually some super interesting litigation over the workaround, Pam Bondi, Magic Dup in New Jersey after the third

circuit total Lena Habita, quite holding herself out of the U.S. Attorney. If you're subscribed, we're going to get into that right now for everyone else. We will see you on the other side of this brief ad break to talk about the administration's efforts to one weird trick their way around the fourth and fifth amendments and the rest of the constitution. And we're back. Okay, let's talk now about a couple of cases where the Trump administration is

appropriating a legal procedure and perverting it so that it accomplishes something completely legal

and cruel. The first is in Idaho and it involves an attack by the government on a horse race

and a Latino festival on October 19th. And I know attack is like a strong word, but I don't just don't think there's any other word for it. This is a Mexican heritage festival attended mostly by families at one o'clock in the afternoon, a helicopter circled overhead and two hundred state and federal law enforcement agents with their guns drawn descended on this peaceful crowd of like 400 people. According to the complaint, police officials, federal and state

zip tied everyone over the age of about 10 and cattle them for four hours on the race track itself with no shelters or bathrooms or food. They had no medics, so multiple people who may hit on the head could not receive care. The agents did however erect a tent for themselves in which they interrogated the attendees about their immigration status at leisure. And by the way, this was, as we said, a joint operation between DHS and the state and local police.

Another Kavanaugh stuff. Yeah, so like Justice Cagstan said, it's fine if they racially profile you, the friendly masked man without identification just asks you if you're a citizen and then let's you go if you say yes, there's no fourth amendment problem here. Yeah, sarcasm aside. This complaint

Is deeply, deeply disturbing, right?

restraints when the kids complained. One child still has scars four months later. They they used

racial slurs, which may be the least surprising thing in all the shot machine guns into the air

and at cars. Yeah, the punitive justification for this assault was illegal gambling. Oh, the feds had an warrant to arrest the owner of the race track and for others for running an unlicensed bedding operation and they used the warrant as justification to detain 400 people for four hours and check their immigration status. And the warrants, by the way, they arrested those guys immediately. The last one of the guys wasn't there that day, but everybody else they got. And then

even though this was warrant for the arrest of these people, they barely bothered to search the business office where this alleged gambling operation was taking place. I mean, clearly this was an immigration drag net using these criminal warrants as an excuse to get around the fourth amendment so that they could search and detain hundreds of mostly Latino people, none of whom were suspected

of actual crimes. Yeah, I think it is worth starting with the fact that ice does not have

general detention and arrest authority, right? Like, I think the authority that the Department of Homeland Security is relying on here is eight USC section 1357. That allows DHS ice to to make arrests for crimes that the agents actually witness or felonies for which they have reasonable suspicion to make a stop and then conduct an advanced inquiry, right? And the reason for that is because you don't want to have a situation where an ice agent watches somebody commit a crime

and then has to wait for law enforcement to come back with a warrant for the crime that they just would know. You give them this sort of joint authority, but DHS, as is the case with virtually

everything the Trump administration has done in its second term, is stretching that beyond the

breaking point to say that they don't have to have reasonable suspicion to stop someone in the

area where a crime has been committed. That is not the law, but DHS is publicly said that that's

their belief that it's what the law is. So here they had a warrant for five guys, which they then bootstrapped into a general immigration rate on hundreds of families who happen to be nearby, who they don't even a ledge had anything to do with the crime. So the lawsuit brought by the families alleges eight causes of action and the connective tissue underlying those eight causes of action are the 42 USC sections 1983 and 1985 claims. Those statutes were enacted as part of the

civil rights act of 1871 and they are the civil laws that you can bring for damages when law enforcement officials violate your civil rights. But there's a problem and that's that section 93 claims are only available when you're right to violate it by someone acting under color of state law like your local cops. So you cannot sue ICE or the FBI under section 1983. That's because those laws were passed as you said part of the Civil Rights Act and there aren't

federal police. So the problem Congress was trying to solve where local cops in Southern state breeding up black citizens and and depriving them out of their civil rights. So there wasn't an analogous federal statute and then as federal law enforcement expanded in the 20th century, the Supreme Court filled in that gap by creating the federal equivalent of a section 1983 claim in a case called Bivins versus Six Unknown Narcotics Agents, which they immediately

began pairing back so much that it sort of doesn't exist anymore. The joke is that you qualify for a Bivins action if your name is Webster Bivins, I know it's not your, you're out of luck. Right. In particular, the Supreme Court made it virtually impossible in 2022 to bring a Bivins action against ICE agents. That was a case called Egbert B. Blay, which we've talked about a bunch

of times on the show. Right. So the bottom line is that these plaintiffs are represented by

experienced ACLU lawyers and they know they have to walk a tight rope here. They can't bring the 1983 claims against ICE or FBI agents alone because they're feds. And they don't want to alleged Bivins claims against those federal agents, because they know they're probably in lose in light of the Supreme Court's decision in Egbert versus Blay. So what the lawyers have done is really clever. They've alleged a conspiracy between the state actors that they can sue

under section 1983. That is the local police departments and the sheriff's office and they've alleged that they were in a conspiracy with FBI and ICE. And as long as at least one of the members of the conspiracy was acting under color of state law, that qualifies under the statute.

The flip side of this is that it means that the burden of proof will be on th...

to show that there was a meeting of the minds among all of the co-conspirators to violate the civil

rights of those individuals who were present. I love this case. I am so interesting and creative and like look, I know that meeting of the minds is supposed to be an uphill climb, but here, the state and local police rolled up there in a convoy, right? They worked together to herd these poor people into this functionally and paddock and detained them. And then they all posted over social media congratulating each other on their joint effort. So I think that that might not be

the hardest part of this claim. Now that's had 1983 cases are very hard to win and this one is

styled as a class action. But I think it is very important that we keep bringing these cases.

This is Nazi shit, right? They sorted the festival attendees by color and they violated the civil rights of all of these families and not that it matters. It wouldn't matter if these were, if these were mostly non-citizens, right? The Kavanaugh and we talk about Kavanaugh stops because just this Kavanaugh in this disgraceful kind of running his mouth in one of the the shadow-docket decisions said it's fine if they racial profile because lots of people in these

places are undocumented immigrants. But the fact of the matter is that most Latino people in Idaho are not undocumented, right? They most of them have legal status. So there isn't even that ridiculous crutch, which Kavanaugh kind of wrote into the law. Like, well, if there's a lot of, you know, statistically speaking, like, no, not statistically speaking. This was just targeting people because they were Latino and using these gambling warrants as a bootstrap end. So I'm

very glad about this lawsuit. I think it's important to kind of hold these people to their

places and publicize what they've done. Strong agree. Okay. Our second act of bootstrap cruelty

for lack of a better term has to do with 37 death row inmates who sentences were commuted by President Biden in December of 2024. At that time, these inmates were all housed at the Bureau prisons special confinement unit in a tarot penitentiary in Indiana. When their sentences were commuted, that triggered a process to move them back to other prisons since they weren't on death row anymore. None of these prisoners was slated to go to ADX Florence, which is the Supermax

Prison in Colorado known as Alcatraz of the Rockies. That is a horrible, horrible inhumane place. That's 23 hours a day in solitary confinement. There's basically no contact the outside world. It is specifically for prisoners who were deemed too dangerous to begin a regular prison. That's where they put El Chapo Guzman and Ted Kizinski. The only one of these death row clemency grants, guys, who wasn't sent there, was transferred to Arizona. Since Trump's executive

order instructed Bondi to see if any of the states wanted to take a track at killing these prisoners and imposing capital punishment and apparently Arizona said yes. Yeah. I want to unpack that just a little bit. So what President Biden did was commute rather than pardon these 37 death row inmates. That was reduced the sentence from to be executed to life in prison without parole.

That's why they're still within the Bureau of Prison System. And now what Donald Trump is trying to do

is take it out on those 37 recipients by sticking them in the very worst prison he can direct them to.

It's it's just absolute naked coat. Right. So yeah, on his first day at office, Trump put

out this executive order instructing the AG to ensure that these offenders are imprisoning conditions consistent with the monstrosity of their crimes and the threats they pose, which is, you know, and then almost immediately, all 37 of them were told that they were being transferred to 80 explorers. So these inmates sued. They raised a bunch of administrative and constitutional claims. And that case landed on the docket of Judge Tim Kelly in DC. We've talked about Judge Kelly before.

I have practiced in front of Judge Kelly. He is a Trump appointee, but he's not a mag guy. He's basically a normie conservative and he wrote an extremely thoughtful opinion saying that it violated the plaintiff's due process rights to dump them in this maximally restricted prison without an individualized determination that that was an appropriate placement for each one of the defendants. He said that, quote, plaintiffs have shown that it is likely that their redesignations

were predetermined and thus violated their due process rights because officials with authority over the bureau of prisons made it clear that they had to be sent to ADX Florence to punish them

No matter what result the ordinary bureau of prisons process might have yielded.

Evidence shows that it is likely that one officials with authority over the bureau of prisons

sought to punish plaintiffs because then President Biden had commuted their death sentences. And two, those officials intervened in the BOP re-designation process that was already underway, dictating outcomes with which BOP officials subordinate to them were not genuinely free to disagree, which resulted in a dramatic uniform about face in how those re-designations were hit. Yeah, and there's an ample testimony and documentary record on this, right? All of these

re-determinations were already underway and the bureau of prisons had told lawyers for these inmates. We think you're going to go here, we think you're going to go there, none of the places was ADX Florence. Yeah, and the key word there is pre-determined, right? If your supervisor has told you in advance, send these people to ADX Florence, then that violates your due process, right? It's because you know, given any process, right? There's that it's already been decided in advance.

And the law is just very, very clear that if a supervising official has told you to reach a

particular outcome, that's not a fair process. Yeah, I think it's also interesting that judge

Kelly cited Trump's social media posts telling the plaintiff to go to hell as evidence that

there was no real process here. I mean, during the first Trump administration, you saw the

courts really hesitant to look at Trump's public mouth bursts as evidence of intense or anonymous. And I think that was a part because the Justice Department stood apart for him or at least claimed to aspire to stand apart from the president here. They've made it a point to say, we are, you know, basically an arm of the president and the president can control everything. If you don't support the president's agenda, we will fire you, yeah. Right. And, and look, Pam Bondi,

make sure to let that be known every day on social media here. In this case, she put out these horrible bloodthirsty social media posts gloating about how awful it would be for these men at 80x floor. It's just so gross. Right. And, and of course, those posts showed up in Tim Kelly's opinion,

which, yeah, you know, they weren't referencing Bill Barr's tweets the first time around.

Anyway, look, I think so much about Justice Blackman saying in 1994, I shall no longer

tinker with the machinery of death. And I just, looking at this case is so gross. And it, it really drives home how much state sanctioned murder has corrupted, you know, our entire justice system. Right. Well, you've got, you've got the attorney general reveling in sadism and pretending that it's like Justice and virtue. I agree 100%. I mean, I don't think you can strike a middle ground here. Yeah. So, okay. Every one of these inmates, even the one who'd been

an orderly in Terrahot and had zero disciplinary record for 22 years, got the exact same recommendation verbatim saying staff reviewed the inmate security needs the committee reviewed his history of disciplinary infractions, institutional adjustment, threat to staff and inmates in current presentation. And it was determined that his security concerns were extraordinary. And he could be placed in the ADX. Boyleer plate language cut and paste. That is not an individualized review.

That is a predetermined outcome at the direction of the head of the department of just, I mean, that direction of the president, right? The Justice Department denied it, of course. But, you know, they also denied moving Galane Maxwell to clubbed that after she said Trump was innocent as a lamb. Even though clubbed, by the way, is categorically off limits to sex offender that my point is the Department of Justice just lies all the time. Yeah. And Trump's appointees know

that, especially the ones in DC who spent four years mopping up the damage from January 6 only to have Trump pardon every single insurrectionist. But, let's not lose sight of this good thing though to happen here, which is Judge Kelly said no, you can't just pretend prisoners have no due process rights, right? These are unpopular people. And it is important to not lose our humanity by denying theirs. And, and the court did it in a way that signals he's no longer

giving this administration the presumption of regularity. And I think from a Trump appointee,

that's that's huge. Okay, we're going to take another quick ad break unless you're a subscriber at longcast.com or on patreon.com/law and chaos pod in which case, no ads for you, not today, not ever and for everyone else, we will be right back talking about the filthy fifth circuit and how the district court judges are handling their chaos. And we're back on Tuesday show. We broke

Down the fifth circuit's decision to green light concentration camps.

circuit goes full Korematsu and I don't think that's an exaggeration. This was a signal that the

administration can intern every single immigrant who doesn't have legal residents here if they want to.

The case is captioned when Rostro Mendez Vibonde and it is the first time where an appellate court

blessed the Trump administration's a historical and wrong interpretation of the illegal immigration reform and immigrant responsibility act of 1996 known as Irira. Until last Friday, it was settled law that under Irira that the mandatory detention provisions of 8 USC section 1225 apply only to applicants for admission. That's the language in the statute who are immediately detained at the border. Everybody else was subject to the next clause 1226. Those are the discretionary detention provisions

and that gives any detainee being held by Homeland Security the right to request a bond hearing before an immigration judge. If that immigration judge determines that the immigrant is neither a danger to the community nor a sufficient flight risk, they can order that person released after posting a bond of at least $1500 and their agreement to abide by the law, checking with the

homeless security from time to time. Every prior president, including Donald Trump and his first

term, understood Irira to work in that way. But then on July 8th, the administration issued this

secret internal memo reporting to revisit that longstanding legal analysis under the new interpretation

DHS was free to classify any immigrant president in the United States outside of legal status as an applicant for admission for purposes of section 1225. Regardless of whether that immigrant had been detained at the border or had been on the non-detain dacquet for years or was in fact in the asylum process. Right. And just to illustrate how radical this argument, that argument was rejected by the United States Supreme Court in a 2018 opinion written by Justice Samuel Alito. It was also rejected

by the seven circuit court of appeals, which is the only other appellate court to weigh in on it. It was rejected by more than 350 district court judges, because all of these cases have to go individually, so the administration kept going back with the same loser argument. Everybody except the hackie and just a handful, 12 cases, four or five of the hackiest Trump appointees ever signed onto this argument because it's nonsense. But on Friday, February 6th, the fifth circuit

gave Trump what he wanted. They said that section 1225 doesn't need permit DHS to detain millions of immigrants indefinitely without even giving them a bond hearing. So now, ISIS is going to kidnap people and immediately move them to the fifth circuit. It's going to be a race to get them out of every other circuit before their families can hire lawyers and file habeas corpus petitions where they where they live, because as we've said, habeas has to be filed where the person is. So

if DHS seizes an immigrant off the street and ships him to Texas or Louisiana or Mississippi, before he can talk to a lawyer or his family can hire a lawyer and file a habeas petition on his behalf, then that petition is going to have to be filed in the fifth circuit where they've said he doesn't have a statutory right to a bond hearing, even somebody who has been in the country for years and was kind of let go and established a life hasn't done anything wrong, paid taxes

went to work, that person can be interned indefinitely and without a bond hearing. But once again, the district court judges are pushing back in the days since the fifth circuit handed down is really at least two judges in Texas, including a George W. Bush appointing him Kathlin Cardone who have determined that when Rostro Mendez does not prevent them from requiring the government

to give bond hearings. This is, I think, another really good illustration of why the rule of law

still matters and why we cover these cases in so much depth, right? Because what these two judges did was to carefully parse the fifth circuit's language and then craft the appropriately

go remedy. So here's what happened. The fifth circuit, as you said Liz, agreed with the Trump administrations

wrong interpretation of the statutes which are a USC sections 1225 and 1226 and that means that again, in the view of the fifth circuit, Congress did indeed delegate to ICE the power to detain millions of immigrants indefinitely without due process back when it enacted Iriera in 1996, even though no president has ever noticed that power until now and there's contemporaneous language in the legislative history that said they were concerned about ICE being able to detain

40,000 immigrants. But you know, what's millions? But that's not the end of the story because

Congress, whatever it wants to delegate to an executive branch agency, cannot...

that are in excess of the constitution and the constitution doesn't just protect citizens. It protects

the people and that means it is well settled as a matter of law that non-citizens in this country have basic fourth amendment rights to do process. So the fifth circuit's holding was a statutory holding. It said that the statute 1225 does not entail immigrants detained by ICE in Texas to abandon hearing when they're detained depending on removal proceedings. But that has nothing to do with the constitution. The fifth circuit did not talk about that constitutional due process issue. It

just combined itself to the statutory interpretation. And so when it came back to the trial court,

they didn't send it and say, you must dismiss when Rostro Mendez is heaviest petition.

They sent it back to the trial judge for further proceedings consistent with the opinion. And because the government only asked the fifth circuit to bless its interpretation of the statute, that opinion did not prevent trial court judges from ordering detainees to be given a bond hearing on constitutional grounds, which is totally different thing. And Judge David Breones arrived at

essentially the same outcome. He relegated the third circuit's opinion to a footnote in his order.

And again, he ordered the government to give an ICE detaining a bond hearing. And when he said that footnote was, this court acknowledges the fifth circuit's presidential decision in when Rostro Mendez Vibondi issued on February 6th to 2026. However, when Rostro Mendez does not change

this case's outcome on procedural due process grounds. In its original due process analysis,

this court accepted without deciding that respondents interpretation of the statute was true. So in other words, he's saying, yeah, with the fifth circuit concluded doesn't change my analysis on the Constitution at all. So okay, bottom line here, the trial courts who want to do the right thing are going to be able to do it. They will be able to do it on constitutional basis, even though the circuit has had this faccocta statutory ruling. And so that they will be able

to grant these habeas petitions. Now, this is terrible, right? It's terrible. I mean, this is this is terrible that we're leaving under this ridiculous statutory regime, which would theoretically justify these water concentration camps, massive concentration camps in the fifth circuit. But all is not lost. There are certainly bases for judges who would like to provide relief to provide it.

I think that's right. And I would add on top of that that the fifth circuit's opinion in

Point West Drum Indus is not binding precedent in the 47 states that are not in the fifth circuit. Though those judges, even district court judges are free to say, yeah, we don't find that reasoning persuasive at all. Okay. We're going to take our last ad break. And then we're going to come back with another story about district judges fighting back. In this time, it is judge on

Arreyes in DC. We've talked about her a lot. She's amazing. And this is a case about temporary

protected status. And today during hearing, Judge Reyes did something really remarkable. And we're back. Okay. Let's talk TPS, which is temporary protected status. The relevant statute here is 8 USC section 1254A. It says that if a country is subject to an ongoing armed conflict or an earthquake, flood, drought, epidemic or other environmental disaster, then the attorney general may, but does not have to designate all or part of that country for temporary protected

status for TPS for a temporary period of time not to exceed 18 months. During that time frame, any immigrant who is a citizen of the TPS state who meets the very lengthy list of criteria for eligibility may not be deported back to the country until that temporary emergency expired. This is humanitarian program because, you know, I was with country. We think it's morally unconscionable to deport anyone to a natural disaster or a war zone regardless of all of the other legal considerations.

Well, you say we, but when Trump took office, Christina, immediately purported to rescind the TPS designations for Venezuela and Haiti. That's illegal. There's no provision to rescind those designations in the statutes. And the courts stopped it or at least I should say held proceedings such that it didn't go into effect in February of 2025. It dragged out until December

Of 2025.

those TPS designations were about to reach the end of their natural lifespan anyway. And this is

the critical part for this lawsuit under 8 USC 1254A, Secretary Christina, um, does in fact have the authority

to terminate those designations for Venezuela and for Haiti. And she purported to do that in December. But 1254A requires that the government shall review the conditions in a TPS country and shall determine whether the conditions for such designation continue to be met and shall provide for publication, uh, each such determination, including the basis for the determination. So she has to say, why? And she didn't. Instead, what she did is tweet, I just met with the president.

I am recommending a full travel ban on every damn country that's been flooding our nation with killers, leeches, and entitlement junkies. Our forefathers built this nation on blood, sweat, and the unyielding love of freedom, not for foreign invaders to slaughter our heroes, suck dry our harder and tax dollars. We're snatched the benefits out to Americans. We don't want

them not one. I know I've said gross like eight times this episode, but like how does a human

being say that? I have no idea. By the way Jen, she's a crass. Not that it matters. Uh, but the TPS program does not suck dry our harder tax dollars. It actually is a substantial

revenue generator. TPS holders pay $5.2 billion in taxes annually. Um, anyway, a group of plaintiffs

looked at that tweet in the underlying conditions. And they sued to block no from terminating Hades TPS designation. That case is captioned Leslie Miote, uh, apologies from getting the name wrong V Trump. I'm going to first start off. I'm going to let Judge Reyes summarize who the plaintiffs are. Uh, she says in her order, plaintiffs are five Haitian TPS holders. They are not it emerges, killers, leeches, or entitlement junkies. They are instead. Fritz Emmanuel Leslie Miote,

a neuroscientist researching Alzheimer's disease. Rudolph Civil, a software engineer at a national bank, Marlena Gale Noble, a laboratory assistant named tax ecology department. Marica,

Marlene Legare, a college economics major, and Wilburne Dursaneville, a full-time registered nurse.

So Judge Reyes ruled that completing out races shit on social media doesn't actually qualify as a reason to termination for the purposes of the administrative procedure act, but is in fact arbitrary and capricious. And then she entered a stay of the TPS termination pursuant to five USC section 705. That's effectively a preliminary injunction. And by the way, as we're recording this just today, Judge Patty Saras in Massachusetts ruled in the exact same way. I mean, in less

colorful terms, but with respect to South Sudanese TPS, TPS residents of the country. So that's another good ruling. So the government demanded that Judge Reyes stay her ruling, pending appeal, which would have allowed them, by the way, to deport all of these people immediately, 350,000 people. And they said, it was an emergency. She had to stay it right away, but they were a little hanky on why. Yeah, that's right. And to that point, Judge Reyes held a hearing today in which she denied

the government's request for a stay. And she pointed out the inconsistency of the government kind of trying to have it both ways, right? And she viewed that through the lens of irreparable harm,

which is one of the things you need to demonstrate in order to get a court issue, a stay of

its orders, right? The DOJ lawyers, as you point out Liz, were deliberately squirrely about whether they intended to start deporting Haitians as soon as the order was stayed. I mean, they definitely did. Right, right. And so what Judge Reyes said was, look, either the government doesn't have any concrete plans to start immediate deportation proceedings, at which point that they're not suffering any harm, let alone a reproverment. My order isn't stopping you from doing a thing you don't want

to do anyway. Or if the government does intend to start deporting Haitians as soon as the TPS status is terminated, then, yeah, okay, in that case you might be harmed by the 705 stay order, but in that case, if that's really what you want to do, it's pretty obvious that the plaintiffs are going to suffer far worse irreparable harm, right? Like, not just that they're being sent to Haiti, which is a war zone, but because they will then be outside the jurisdiction of U.S. courts.

Yeah, I don't want to skip over that part. All right. If Judge Reyes is order is stayed and the administration can terminate Haiti's TPS designation, then that will let the Trump administration immediately today deport 350,000 immigrants to a country that is on the state department's level for do not travelists, right? That's an international state of emergency. There's widespread

Gang violence, kidnapping, and civil unrest.

deported to Haiti from Puerto Rico, were found dead. They've been beheaded. So for the government

to say, we are going to suffer irreparable harm if you don't let us carry out these deportations immediately, is so crazy as compared to the irreparable harm that people will be subject to if they're deported to a war zone. Yeah. So those are the real stakes of this. I mean, a lot of it sort of

seemed bloodless, and we talk a lot about the one where to trick of it, but those are the, that's what

we're talking about here. Yeah. So that was really remarkable and significant then, as you said, a matter of life and death. And then Judge Reyes did something else. She began by saying, I was sure if I wanted to put this on the record, but I talked to my colleagues on the bench, right?

Other judges in the US just record for DC, and I think I have to. And she started out with this

kind of self-the-face anecdote. I'm like, where's this going? She says, yeah, last night I was at Georgetown Law School. I was asked to moderate a debate by the federalist, the federalist society had put on. The topic was, was Dobbs correctly decided, and then this was sort of the last moment of, of levity. She said, you know, moderating a debate about abortion is going to be the least controversial thing I do this year. And then she says, for the record, yes, I am an immigrant to this

country. No, I didn't hide that fact during the nomination process. I didn't hide it from the American Bar Association. I didn't hide it from President Biden. I didn't hide it from the 100 members of the Senate that voted on my confirmation. And then she said, and yet, when I decide these immigration cases, I get referred to as a foreign-born lesbian. I don't get referred to as a magna cum laude graduate of Harvard Law School with 22 years of legal experience. And then she started reading her

hate mail. And I don't know how to reproduce that, right? She, she gets called the C word so often that what she said was, well, I can take it. But you guys should at least pick up a faissaurus now in that. She read one email that said, I hope you lose your life at lunchtime, you worthless,

and then there was a slur. She read another email that said, the best way you can help America

is to eat a bullet. And then, Judge Reyes said that her colleagues are also getting death threats, themselves and their families. So, okay, look, those emails are obviously appalling. But the fact that she talked about this from the bench is really a sea change, and I think I think we need to kind of, let's go back in just like four years, less than four years, to when Judge Tanya Chakkin also in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia was

presiding over Trump for United States. And she issued the kind of the mildest of gag orders, not saying that Trump couldn't attack her, but saying he couldn't attack jurors and couldn't attack line attorneys in the U.S. Attorney's Office. And the Trump and Todd Blanche, by the way, screamed bloody murder that this was a great assault on the First Amendment. And part of the reason that he was able to make that argument was that there was for such a long time this taboo on

judges and public officials, but particularly judges talking about the threats to them. One, because it kind of made it look like maybe they would be swayed by these threats, but also because the security apparatus around them said, if you acknowledge these threats, you will

encourage them. And so, judges just never talked about it, right? You would occasionally get a

conviction that, in fact, somebody, you know, multiple people went to jail for threatening, threatening judge Chakkin and threatening funny willas that the Putin County Prosecutor, but they didn't talk about it because, as again, that was not the judicial culture. And now they're

starting to talk about it because, I think, A, it's much, much worse. Like we talked in the First

segment about the Justice Department compiling a hit list of judges that they want to move to impeach. And that is, you know, that is a part of what we see every day with the Justice Department, Pam Bondi and Todd Blanche attacking judges in their social media feeds with the direct goal of making sure that they get harassed all the time. Yeah, they know exactly what they're doing. Right. It's an effort to intimidate. It is an effort to make it costlier for judges to do their

job. It's an attack on the judiciary. And of course, it comes from the top right Donald Trump

Tweets horrible shit all the time.

where the judges are going to start to talk about this because ignoring it has allowed Trump and his

minions to get away with it in ways that are really, really, really dangerous. I think that is exactly

right. And as I was listening to this recitation of the hate mail, I was wondering how that got

situated on the record in this case. Right. Like this is not in the context of a motion for a

gag order. Right. This was not in the context of a motion for sanctions. What it was leading to was Judge Reyes saying on the record with DOJ Lawyer's present, we and by that she meant the entire

federal judiciary will not be intimidated. That's what she said word forward. She laid down the marker

and I'm glad to see it for all of the reasons that you said. I absolutely am glad to see it. I mean, I think it is a sign of distress from the judiciary. Right. And it's signal that their traditional kind of reticence to speak in salarity is not serving them well. And it's what we've

seen many, many signs of distress. But I think it's important that what she said was,

I'm not telling you this because I'm scared. I'm telling you this because I'm not scared and you're not going to scare me, which is important. And that's the note I want to end on here. So,

thank you guys so much for hanging out with us and trusting as I know that these are not always

easy conversations to listen to. But we're glad that you're here with us. So we'd love for you to support us at patreon.com/loncastpod or lawncastpod.com or leave us a five star view on your podcast platform of choice. Have a lovely, lovely weekend. And I hope that it is thawing where you are. It's still pretty icy where we are. But we got hope, we got hope it'll get to be 40 degrees this weekend. Thanks, guys. lawncastpodcast is production of razor-to-media LLC. Is intended solely as an

entertainment, does not constantly go by, so it does not form an attorney-clime relationship. This shows research and written by this guy and produced by Bryce Blink and Engle. lawncastpod copyright razor-to-media LLC. All rights reserved.

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