In an unusual move, the Trump administration on Tuesday filed a lawsuit against all 15 federal judges in Maryland over an order blocking the immediate deportation of migrants challenging their removals.

At issue is a May order signed by Chief Judge George L. Russell III blocking the administration from immediately removing from the U.S. any immigrants who file paperwork with the Maryland district court seeking a review of their detention. The order blocks the removal until 4 p.m. on the second business day after the habeas corpus petition is filed.

The administration says the automatic pause on removals violates a Supreme Court ruling and impedes the president’s authority to enforce immigration laws.

It’s rare for anyone — especially the federal government — to sue the entire federal bench in a state. The action ratchets up a fight with the federal judiciary over President Trump’s immigration policies, and underscores the administration’s growing exasperation with federal judges who have turned aside executive branch actions.

“It’s extraordinary,” Laurie Levenson, a professor at Loyola Law School, told the Associated Press of the Justice Department’s lawsuit. “And it’s escalating DOJ’s effort to challenge federal judges.”

Mr. Trump has been locked for weeks in a growing showdown with the federal judiciary amid a barrage of legal challenges to the president’s policies, especially his efforts to rapidly ramp up deportations. The Justice Department has grown increasingly frustrated by rulings blocking the president’s agenda, accusing judges of improperly impeding the president’s powers.

“President Trump’s executive authority has been undermined since the first hours of his presidency by an endless barrage of injunctions designed to halt his agenda,” Attorney General Pamela Bondi said in a statement Wednesday. “The American people elected President Trump to carry out his policy agenda: this pattern of judicial overreach undermines the democratic process and cannot be allowed to stand.”

A spokesman for the Maryland district court declined to comment to the AP.

Mr. Trump has railed against unfavorable judicial rulings, and in one case called for the impeachment of a federal judge in Washington, D.C., who ordered planeloads of deported immigrants to be turned around — and later threatened to hold government officials in contempt for defying his orders. That led Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts to issue a rare statement saying, “impeachment is not an appropriate response to disagreement concerning a judicial decision.”

Among the judges named in the Trump administration’s lawsuit is U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis, who has called the administration’s deportation of Kilmar Abrego Garcia to El Salvador illegal. Attorneys for Abrego Garcia have asked Xinis to impose fines against the administration for contempt, arguing that it ignored court orders for weeks to return him to the U.S.

The government acknowledged that Abrego Garcia was deported by mistake, and a Justice Department lawyer said in Xinis’ courtroom that the department didn’t give him sufficient information about the case. That lawyer, Erez Reuveni, was later fired, and filed a whistleblower complaint obtained by CBS News this week that alleged top officials at the department talked about ignoring court orders and withholding information from judges. Justice Department officials denied the allegations.

Abrego Garcia was ultimately returned to the U.S. earlier this month and hit with smuggling charges. A judge declined the government’s request to detain him pre-trial last weekend, but he will remain in federal custody at least until Friday.

The order signed by Russell that led to this week’s lawsuit says it aims to maintain existing conditions and the potential jurisdiction of the court, ensure immigrant petitioners are able to participate in court proceedings and access attorneys and give the government “fulsome opportunity to brief and present arguments in its defense.”

In an amended order, Russell said the court had received an influx of habeas petitions after-hours that “resulted in hurried and frustrating hearings in that obtaining clear and concrete information about the location and status of the petitioners is elusive.”

But the Trump administration says the judge cannot issue a standing order that automatically enjoins the government from removing people who file habeas petitions. The lawsuit called the order “lawless” and “judicial overreach.” 

The Trump administration has asked the Maryland judges to recuse themselves from the case. It wants a clerk to have a federal judge from another state hear it.

James Sample, a constitutional law professor at Hofstra University, described the lawsuit as further part of the erosion of legal norms by the administration. Normally when parties are on the losing side of an injunction, they appeal the order — not sue the court or judges, he said.

On one hand, he said, the Justice Department has a point that injunctions should be considered extraordinary relief; it’s unusual for them to be granted automatically in an entire class of cases. But, he added, it’s the administration’s own actions in repeatedly moving detainees to prevent them from obtaining writs of habeas corpus that prompted the court to issue the order.

“The judges here didn’t ask to be put in this unenviable position,” Sample told the Associated Press. “Faced with imperfect options, they have made an entirely reasonable, cautious choice to modestly check an executive branch that is determined to circumvent any semblance of impartial process.”



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