Jack - Crime is Like a Denny's
Episode Date: May 25, 2025The Supreme Court remanded the Alien Enemies Act case back down to the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, and at least one of the judges isn’t happy about it.Abrego Garcia’s deportation to El Salvador ...set off a fierce debate among officials in three cabinet agencies, despite agreement there had been a mistake.Tulsi Gabbard’s Chief of Staff ordered intelligence analysts to edit an assessment with the hope of insulating Trump and Gabbard from being attacked for the administration’s claim that Venezuela’s government controls a criminal gang.A federal judge found that the Trump Administration violated a court order when it sent a planeload of migrants to war-torn South Sudan, teeing up yet another possible contempt proceeding against the government. Plus listener questions…Questions for the pod? Questions from ListenersThank you, CBDistillery!Use promo code UNJUST at CBDistillery.com for 25% off your purchase. Specific product availability depends on individual state regulations. Follow AG Substack|MuellershewroteBlueSky|@muellershewroteAndrew McCabe isn’t on social media, but you can buy his book The ThreatThe Threat: How the FBI Protects America in the Age of Terror and TrumpWe would like to know more about our listeners. Please participate in this brief surveyListener Survey and CommentsThis Show is Available Ad-Free And Early For Patreon and Supercast Supporters at the Justice Enforcers level and above:https://dailybeans.supercast.techOrhttps://patreon.com/thedailybeansOr when you subscribe on Apple Podcastshttps://apple.co/3YNpW3P
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MSW Media.
The Supreme Court remanded the Alien Enemies Act case back down to the Fifth Circuit Court
of Appeals.
And at least one of the judges isn't happy about it.
Abrego Garcia's deportation to El Salvador set off a fierce debate among officials in
three cabinet agencies, despite agreement that there had been a mistake.
Tulsi Gabbard's chief of staff ordered intelligence analysts to edit an assessment with the hope
of insulating President Trump and Ms. Gabbard from being attacked for the administration's
claim that Venezuela's government controls a criminal gang.
And a federal judge found that the Trump administration violated a court order when it sent a plane
load of migrants to war torn South Sudan, teeing up yet another possible contempt proceeding
against the government.
This is unjustified.
Hey everybody, it is Sunday, May 25th, 2025.
I'm Alison Gill.
And I'm Andy McCabe.
All right, Alison, when is going to be the week when I open by saying, oh, not much going
on here.
Yeah, pretty slow news week, I don't think is in our future anytime soon.
It's definitely not this week because once again, a lot has happened in the past seven
days and we're going to try to cover it all for you on today's episode.
So where do you want to start? Well, given that we had an entire bonus episode on Monday, this past Monday
dedicated to the Supreme court decision seven to two, blocking the government
from removing members of the putative class in the Northern district of Texas,
pending the outcome of the litigation overdue process and the legality of the
alien enemies act, I think we should
start there.
Sounds good.
Yeah, because you know, Andy, last week you and I talked about that ruling quite a bit
and how Justice Kavanaugh wrote this weird like three paragraph concurrence saying he
agreed with the seven to two ruling, but he would not have remanded it back to the Fifth
Circuit. He said, bring me arguments, bring me briefings, let's decide it now. But they did, they remanded
it back to the Fifth Circuit to determine what constitutes meaningful notice, like more
than 24 hours, they said, like 21 days, 10 days, what does it look like to give notice
for people so that they can file habeas
petitions to not be removed under the Alien Enemies Act? And secondly, they had to decide
at the Fifth Circuit whether or not the Alien Enemies Act is even legal to use here in this
particular instance. And I joked with you about the Fifth Circuit probably being mad
about having to begrudgingly take up the mantle since they
had decided just earlier, like not that long before, that they didn't have jurisdiction
to weigh in. But the Supreme Court said, you got to and the Fifth Circuit, you got it wrong
on jurisdiction. So you need to do this work. Well, as it turns out, one of the judges on
the Fifth Circuit was really, really unhappy
about being forced to do this work.
Yeah, he was full on, no backsees mode, no backsees, we don't want this one back.
But he gets it anyway.
And as law professor Steve Lattick explains on his one first newsletter, on Tuesday, the
Fifth Circuit panel that had originally held that it lacked jurisdiction discharged its duty
issuing a summary judgment order that expedited the appeal
to the next available randomly designated
regular oral argument panel.
That should have been the end of it.
But Judge James Ho, who's widely viewed
as one of the most likely successors to Clarence Thomas
and has been accused of rather actively
auditioning for the job, had some thoughts that he chose to commit to the pages of the
Federal Reporter fourth series. That's the volume of books where the Fifth Circuit opinions are
published. In a truly striking eight-page opinion concurring in the panel's order, Ho took serious exception
to the Supreme Court majority in AARP 2, which he accused of showing quote disrespect to
both the district judge and President Trump in favor of his words quote, favored litigants
like members of Trende Aragwa.
Yes, he actually wrote that.
Oh my gosh.
All right.
So AARP 2 and they've asked to change the name because the American Association for
Retired People is like, this is not us.
But AARP 2 is the case of the deportees in the Blue Bonnet Detention Facility in the
North District of Texas.
That's right.
And these are the ones who spelled out SOS in the yard, in the prison yard with their
bodies. And then like in the middle of the night were put on buses to Abilene purportedly
to be taken out of the country. And that's when they filed emergency, you know, with
the Fifth Circuit and with the Supreme Court saying, Hey, the district court hasn't said
anything and these folks are about to be put on a plane and to be removed from the country. Please help,
step in. We're on a time crunch here. The buses were turned around.
But let's turn to Judge Ho's opinion. And this is not the same Judge Ho that decided
the Eric Adams case. This is a different Judge
Ho in the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. Petitioners identified as members of Trende
Aragwa, a designated foreign terrorist organization, should not be allowed to proceed in this appeal.
Our April 18th order held that we lacked jurisdiction to grant the relief sought by the petitioners.
But last Friday, the Supreme Court reversed our unanimous decision over a vigorous dissent by Justice Alito joined only by Justice Thomas.
As an inferior court, we're duty bound to follow Supreme Court rulings, whether we agree
with them or not. We don't have to like it, but we have to do it. So I concur in our order
today expediting our consideration of this matter
as directed by the Supreme Court. But I write to state my sincere concerns about how the district
judge as well as the president and other officials have been treated in this case. I worry that the
disrespect they've been shown will not inspire continued respect for the judiciary without which we cannot
long function. Wow.
Yeah, a little, a little better. Judge how I don't know. Um, okay. So he continues. It
is not the role of the judiciary to check the excesses of the other branches anymore.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
I knew you were going to hit the pause button on that one.
Yes, it is.
What you're...
If you define excesses as constitutional excesses, things that go beyond your constitutional
authority, then actually that's exactly your job.
That's your job.
I think it's your only job.
Yikes. Okay.
Sorry for interrupting.
No, that's okay. Any more than it's our role to check the excesses of any other American citizen.
Judges do not roam the countryside looking for opportunities to chastise government officials for their mistakes. Well, that's good to know.
I want to see like an animated short of justices and judges roaming the countryside.
Roaming the countryside.
Like in the old days when they used to actually ride the circuit.
That's where that comes from.
I wish they still rode the circuit.
I know, right?
They should have to travel by horseback, even in this day and age.
The country sides.
Okay. He goes on to say, well, he seems to have a real problem with the urgency of the petition. I'll just say that. Keep in mind that the government had told another court that it
reserved the right to restart removals at midnight the same day, and that DHS had already
loaded migrants on the buses
from the Blue Bonnet detention facility
to take them to the airport in Abilene.
Despite all that.
So you don't really have to roam the countryside.
It's on your docket, sir.
Yeah, yeah, for sure.
Despite all those facts, he says, quote,
rather than commend the district court,
however, the Supreme Court charged the district court
with quote, inaction, not for 42 minutes,
but for 14 hours in 28 minutes.
This inaction was, according to the court,
tantamount to quote, refusing to rule on the injunction.
He goes on, this charge is worth exploring.
To get to 14 hours in 28 minutes, rather than 42 minutes,
the court was obviously starting the clock at 1234 AM,
rather than 1248 PM, when petitioners told
the district court for the first time
that they wanted a ruling before the government
could respond.
But starting the clock at 1234 AM,
not only ignores the court's
express instructions respecting the government's right to respond, it also
ignores the fact that the court is starting the clock at all at 1234 a.m.
You can almost hear the intensity in his writing. We seem to have
forgotten that this is a district court, not a Denny's.
All right, I'm gonna give him some props for that line.
That was funny.
You landed that one.
This is the first time I've ever heard anyone suggest
that district judges have a duty to check their dockets
at all hours of the night,
just in case a party decides to file a motion.
You know, the deportations under the alien enemies act are also not a Denny's, sir.
Yeah.
They happen in the middle of the night.
They're kind of like a Denny's actually.
It's just going constantly cranking out those grand slam breakfasts whether you want them
or not.
That's kind of the way the deportations are going.
They are a 24 seven operation. You're right.
So when that's what you're dealing with, that's what you're dealing with. You gots to get up
and handle the case. I think that's what the Supreme Court was suggesting.
Yeah. He's like, what do you want? I can't be expected to get up at the crack of noon
and look at the docket.
Just to keep these awful Trandeiroguas from being sent to a foreign dungeon.
Yeah, against the law.
Actually you can.
You actually should.
Anyway, he's not finished.
He says, if this is going to become the norm, then we should say so.
District judges are hereby expected to be available 24 hours a day.
And the Judicial Conference of the United States and the Administrative Office of the United States Courts
should secure from Congress the resources and staffing
necessary to ensure 24-hour operations
in every district court across the country.
Ah, if this is not to become the norm,
then we should admit that this is a special treatment
being afforded to certain favored litigants,
like members of Trende Aragwa, and we should stop pretending that Lady Justice is blindfolded.
Wow.
Wow.
He concludes, this appeal should be over.
Over.
I've just added that.
Petitioners denied the district court the opportunity to rule on their emergency motion
in the first instance.
That alone should have been enough to terminate this appeal, but the Supreme Court has reversed our unanimous judgment, so this appeal must
now proceed. I accordingly concur." And I just want to remind everybody here that once
the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals was weighed in on by the government, that gave the Supreme
Court jurisdiction to do what they did, Regardless of the 14 hours or the 42 minutes
Yeah, so they the Supreme Court having jurisdiction and remanding this back now keep in mind Kavanaugh didn't want to remand this back to them
And wanted to do all the or arguments and briefings himself
Well, not himself, but you know here it immediately
But to be really angry about the Supreme Court's remand when
regardless of what the district court did, the Supreme Court did have jurisdiction. And
they were able to vacate, they were able to treat it as a writ of certiorari and vacate the Fifth Circuit's decision because
the government responded. So it's, I don't know, it's just, it's wild that he, but I
think what is even more kind of shocking Andy is his, Oh, so it seems like the Supreme Court
and Trendy Aragwa are pals and you know,
the Supreme Court is palling around
with terrorist organizations at Denny's
in the middle of the night or whatever.
It's just bizarre.
It's really crazy.
I've never seen anything like this.
He, like every discussion nowadays,
it's all laced with political accusations.
Like, oh, you know, you're favoring this other
party. There's no real justice, you know. And the heart of his concern is like, not standing
up for the lower court, but rather like, look at how unreasonable this is that we should
be expected to respond in the middle of the night. What do you think the Supreme Court does all the time on these last second requests
for appeals from execution orders?
This stuff doesn't come in only in business hours.
It's just the way it goes.
I feel like he's really kind of degraded himself here with this. And it's likely that if he does have, you know, if he hopes for,
he hopes to be considered for a Supreme Court slot, man, I really feel like this thing will come
back to haunt him. Well, it depends on who's doing the... That's true. But I mean, just, I mean,
well, we've seen, I guess, the failure of judicial temperament to mean anything in
the Supreme Court nomination and confirmation process, thanks to Brett Kavanaugh. But this
certainly does not comport with what traditionally we think about as judicial temperament, certainly
at this level.
Yeah, but it certainly is the kind of judicial temperament that I think a lot of Republicans in this
administration prefer. But the time thing, I mean, if you like, wait, I just want to
clear something up a little bit. If I could ask Judge Ho a question. I understand you
don't like the 1234 in the morning thing, but could you have not seen it at eight in
the morning? Could the district judge have not seen it in the morning? Because then we've got another, at least, you know, six hours, right?
A working day.
Yeah.
Absolutely. And again, much like the Alito dissent that he references, it's a complete
absence in his writing here of any kind of recognition of what is at stake for these human beings
that were being ferried to the plane
as this nonsense was taking place.
Right.
Like nothing, nothing, no recognition
that this is an extreme situation
in which this, you know, going to court
is a last resort for people who are,
who by anybody's estimation have been in the
least case denied due process. But you know, what do you expect?
Yeah. And I mean, that's, you know, when you're racing against the clock like that, you don't
really have a choice if you're the petitioner, if you just file it as soon as you can.
Right.
Especially with the government. And Alito got it wrong when Alito said,
oh, they're not going to deport anybody this weekend. That's the opposite of what they
said in Boasberg's court. Even though Boasberg said, I can't issue a restraining order. I'm,
I don't have jurisdiction here. I'm in DC. Um, but it was still brought up. Um, you know,
so I don't know if this is just a very odd concurrence to write.
And it's a tongue in cheek concurrence, right?
He's concurring with their order to like
get re-involved here because he has to.
He makes that perfectly clear in his first paragraph.
We don't have to like it.
Right, he would love to have been dissenting.
Poor you, poor you having to work on a weekend
when there are people in a torture prison
that were sent there by mistake. Poor you having to work on a weekend when there are people in a torture prison that
were sent there by mistake.
Poor you, Judge Ho.
You know, at the end of the day, if the government had actually given these people adequate notice
as a part of their due process rights, there would have been no time crunch.
Wouldn't have even been here, yeah.
None of this would have happened.
They would have had the opportunity to think about it, contact an attorney, hire that person,
talk to them, come up with a habeas motion and pursue it under whatever circumstances
the government wanted to define it.
Right.
If they had a 10-day period in which to object, then the district court would have
had 10 days to respond. So anyway, I want to continue to talk more about the Alien Enemies
Act case, specifically the claim that the administration is making that somehow the
the trend, trend a ragwa is, is has been sent here by the Maduro regime.
We are under attack.
There was an incursion on US soil by Venezuela.
And I want to discuss that because we have new information from the same reporters who
came out and reported on those.
You remember those intelligence NIC assessments?
I do.
Yeah. But there's more information now and it's pretty damning. But we have to take a quick break. reported on those. Remember those intelligence NIC assessments? I do.
Yeah, but there's more information now and it's pretty damning, but we have to take a
quick break. So stick around. We'll be right back.
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Hey, everybody. Welcome back. All right. Let's continue. As I said before the break with the
Alien Enemies Act cases, you'll recall in previous weeks, going all the way back to February actually,
Andy, you and I discussed
the intelligence community's analyses,
there's multiple now,
that Tren de Aragua is not acting on behalf
of the Maduro regime or the Venezuelan government at all.
That assertion is at the center
of the Trump administration's claim
that its use of the Alien Enemies Act is lawful
because we are at war with Venezuela, Andy.
Oh yeah.
And that Trenda Aragua is equivalent to an incursion or an invasion of the United States.
But on February 26th, the intelligence, the NIC, the Intelligence Council, National Intelligence
Council released an analysis saying that TDA, Trenda Aragua, is not here on behalf of the
Venezuelan government.
And we know that the Trump administration didn't like that answer, and we knew that
they asked for another analysis.
And we got one, April 7th, saying pretty much the same thing, but explaining the only reason
the FBI had a little bit of a disagreement was because it's possible, though not confirmed, that some members of Maduro's regime
might have sent some members of TDA
to five or more countries to stir up trouble.
But that was all very iffy, right?
That intelligence was not very well-sourced.
But the overall assessment remained the same.
There's no official ties between TDA's presence
in the United States and the government of Venezuela.
Well, this new reporting, Andy, from the New York Times
shows that not only did the Trump administration
ask for that new assessment,
they actually asked the intelligence analysts to edit it,
make changes to their conclusions.
Those people refused and ended up being fired though.
That's right, so we know from the New York Times, new emails document how a top aide to Tulsi Gabbard,
the director of national intelligence,
ordered analysts to edit an assessment
with the hope of insulating President Trump and Ms. Gabbard
from being attacked for the administration's claim
that Venezuela's government controls a criminal gang.
We need to do some rewriting and
more analytic work so this document is not used against the DNI or POTUS. Wow.
Yeah, Joe Kent, the chief of staff to Ms. Gabbard, wrote in an email to a group of
intelligence analysts and officials on April 3rd using shorthand for Ms.
Gabbard's position and for the President of the United States.
So, thanks for your intelligence analysis, but can you change it, please, to protect
the President and Gabbard?
Yeah, like totally missing the point of what intelligence is and how the process works
and what it's based on. And this guy is a very high ranking person at the DNI and about
to get another job.
Yeah, that's frightening.
Yep.
Now, the article goes on to say the Times reported last week that Mr. Kent, who you
were talking about there, had pushed analysts to redo the assessment
dated February 26th of the relationship between Venezuela's government and the gang, Tren
de Aragua, after it came to light that the assessment contradicted a subsequent claim
by Mr. Trump. The disclosure of the precise language of Mr. Kent's emails has been added
to the emerging picture of the politicized intervention.
And I'm glad they recognize this as politicized.
Yeah.
The final memo, which is dated April 7th
and has since become public,
still contradicts the key claim that Trump made
to justify sending people accused of being members
of Trinidad or Agua to a notorious Salvadoran prison
without due process.
It still says the same thing.
Emails on the topic from Mr. Kent, who is also Mr. Trump's pending nominee to lead the National
Counterterrorism Center, yikes, have circulated within the intelligence community and were
described by people briefed on them. Mr. Kent's interventions have raised internal alarms
about politicizing intelligence analysis. Defenders of Mr. Kent have disputed that his attempted
intervention was part of a pressure campaign,
arguing that he was trying to show more
of what the intelligence community knew about the gang.
All right, so hold on a second here.
Here's a little insider knowledge.
The way you know what the community knows about an issue
is you ask the NIC, the National Intelligence
Council, a question.
Hey, what's the deal with Trende Aragua?
Are they part of the Venezuelan government?
Were they sent here by the government?
La la la.
And then you wait.
And what the NIC does is they scrape up everything that we have on this subject.
They go through it all.
They organize it and they come back to you with
a finished product that includes their analytical judgment based on the analysis and the record.
It could be like source reporting, it could be interviews, it could be anything, it could
be open source reporting, and they give you their official position.
But when you call back and say, no, no, put this in, you are taking that
piece of analysis and turning it into a political argument. Okay, so the disclosure of his email
supports the accounts of critics who said he was applying political pressure to generate a torqued
narrative that would support rather than undermine the administration's policy agenda.
Yes, the White House requested the original assessment in February as it was preparing
Mr. Trump's Alien Enemies Act proclamation. They said we should get some supporting evidence
here.
We have the proclamation. We know what we're proclaiming. Can you just give us something
that says we're right?
Yeah, we have a proclamation in search of supporting evidence.
That's right.
Even after the council produced its first assessment, Trump proceeded to sign the proclamation
that put forward the opposite claim in order to activate wartime deportation powers.
So either he knew about it and ignored it, or he didn't have anything to do with it.
And Stephen Miller was signing it for him and auto pen.
The disconnect first came to light in a March 20th Times article
that reported on the existence of the February 26th memo.
That's when we brought it to you here on Unjustified.
And detailed why the intelligence community had reached its conclusion.
The Times also reported that the FBI partly dissented
and thought there were some links possibly between the gang and Venezuela's government based on information that the rest of the country's spy agencies
thought was not credible.
The Trump administration reacted with alarm to the disclosure of the intelligence assessment.
On March 21st of Friday, Todd Blanch, the Deputy Attorney General, who was also a former
criminal defense attorney for Trump,
issued a statement saying the Justice Department is going to open a criminal league investigation,
while also portraying the Times article as inaccurate.
The following Monday, March 24, Mr. Kent sent an email to several people, including Michael
Collins, then the acting head of the National Intelligence Council.
Attaching a copy of
the Times article to his message and telling the team to look at it, Mr. Kent
said it was necessary, quote, to rethink the assessment according to multiple
people who described it. Not because the Times article had any new evidence. We
don't like the way the Times wrote this story, so let's rewrite our analysis.
Okay, quote, flooding our nation with migrants and especially migrants, and of course he
puts quotes around the word migrant, who are part of a violent criminal gang is the action
of a hostile nation, even if the government of Venezuela isn't specifically tasking or
enabling TDA's operations,
Mr. Kent wrote according to the people briefed on the email.
Actually, no, I don't know how you would think you would have an analyst that would draw
that conclusion.
Mr. Kent's comment that the Maduro administration wasn't, quote, tasking or enabling the gang's
operations appears to be a concession that Mr. Trump's
claim might be doubtful.
I like the wording there.
The admission that they're full of it kind of points to the fact that Trump is full of
it, I think is probably a more robust way to say that.
But Mr. Kent doubles down on the idea that Venezuela had taken advantage of Biden era
immigration policies to allow migrants, including gang members, into the United States.
That still doesn't mean that it's an incursion by a foreign government. Mr. Collins agreed
to start work on a new council assessment, according to people familiar. Collins and
Kent exchanged several emails on April 3rd and April April 4. That's a handful of days before that second assessment came out.
But in one long email on April 3, Kent asked for changes, arguing that it
wrongly, in his view, made it sound as if the Venezuelan government had no
connections to the gang.
Quote, let's just come out and say TDA leaders are given sanctuary in
Venezuela as their gang members commit horrendous crimes in America.
And then we can provide the context about our exact knowledge of relationships
between TDA and the Venezuelan government.
That's what Kent wrote.
Kent was also mad that the memo didn't blame Biden.
Quote, TDA didn't need logistical support from the Venezuelan government
because Biden provided it for them.
So again, he's admitting that they don't have any connection.
So you want us to say that the Venezuelan government really supported and sent all
these people, but what you really think is that it's Biden's fault.
Yeah, they didn't need to cause Biden provided support to trend air.
We're being invaded by Biden.
Oh, I think maybe you're right.
This is just, it's crazy.
It's so circular, it's ridiculous.
I know, he went on to say,
I understand some may view this as political, but it's not.
Oh, so you understand.
Wow.
I mean, saying it's not doesn't make it not.
Well, you know.
I'm telling you this is not political.
That's what he's saying there.
No, I get this.
Get this, Andy.
According to the Times, Collins, the guy at the Nick, actually made several edits to the
memo before it was released April 7th at the direction of Kent.
So what we actually got goes easier on the Trump administration than it did originally. In fact, Mr. Kent
was happy with the final memo and he is the one that authorized its release via the FOIA
request, which is hilarious because Todd Blanch launched an investigation into the leaks and
then Tulsi Gabbard fired the guys at the Nick. But it was Mr. Kent that said, this looks
great. Send it out.
Now they ended up firing, like I said, firing Collins and his colleague at Nick.
And as it turns out, it was the part of the FBI's dissent where the FBI was like, well,
I mean, I guess not credibly.
Some of the people in the Maduro regime who we don't have names for might have sent some
people from Tren de Aragüe to five different countries maybe. That apparently made Kent
be like excellent.
Perfect. There you go.
That backs us up, but it totally doesn't.
No. And I don't know exactly what that reference is because it's not specified in the piece, but my strong suspicion is the FBI probably said,
well, we have interviewed a few Trende Aragua members
who are currently in custody.
And some of them have said that they had some kind
of connection to Venezuelan government members
on like a personal level.
And those were likely statements, first
of all, made while they're in custody, likely seeking cooperation benefits from the government
and are completely in corrupt. They can't be corroborated.
They were name dropping. And that's actually also in the article elsewhere. This article
is really long and there's more to it. So check it out at the New York Times if you
want. But yeah, they basically that's where they got this information was interviewing, uh, Trendy Aragon members in custody, purported
trending, who were like, you, you don't, you don't have any idea who I am. I know Brad
Pitt. I know, you know, they were just name dropping to see if they could, uh, cut a cooperation
deal or get released. So I agree with you on that. And that was why the FBI added, we can't corroborate
any of this and it's not very credible. So anyway, I just thought it was pretty astounding
that the chief of staff to the DNI asked for edits to a document produced by Nick because they wanted it to say something different and then fired the people who produced that document after releasing it themselves.
This has been such a controversial thing well for forever but particularly in the post nine eleven world.
When this is exactly what happened when CIA analysts were pushed to conclude that Saddam Hussein had a role in planning and executing 9-11 to give the Bush administration more reason to justify invading Iraq. It is now widely viewed as a massive mistake and an abrogation of their duty to just simply provide the facts
and not move things for political reasons.
So we thought we were kind of beyond all that,
but as with a lot of things with this administration,
some of the bad old stuff is all coming back
in a really destructive way.
And it seems using massaging, warping intelligence to suit political
purposes is one of those things that's back now and bigger than ever.
Yeah, and with the consequence of jailing people unlawfully, many of whom have never
been convicted of a crime. Yeah. Or they're on accident.
And this guy Kent is now up for the job of running the National Counterterrorism Center,
NCTC, which is a huge job on the counterterrorism side.
It's the one place that everybody goes to get conclusive analysis and US government
opinions on everything from who should be targeted overseas
and kinetic strikes and the current state of affairs
with all the most important and deadly terrorist
organizations that we're constantly tracking.
So we know that his qualification for having that job
is gonna be he's the chief politicizer of intelligence.
I mean, I feel like that's a really bad spot for him
or for us to have him there. But we'll have to see how that goes. It is a Senate confirmed
position. So I expect he'll probably see some pushback from at least half the folks up there.
Yeah, I hope so. I hope so. And I'm assuming the members of that committee have this information and are
well aware of it. Otherwise, you know, and actually, I probably will send them an email
or two anyway to just to let them know.
Send it.
Hey, just listen to this episode of Unjustified Widget. All right, we have actually some behind the scenes information about what happened between
agencies regarding Abrego Garcia as well.
And it's also pretty damning for the government.
So we want to cover that, but we have to take a quick break.
So stick around.
We'll be right back. Welcome back.
Okay, we have a couple more stories about due process.
The first is about the fight inside the Trump administration over what to do about Abrego
Garcia.
Now, this reporting also comes from the New York Times.
A mistake had been made.
That much was clear. The Trump administration had deported a Maryland man named Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia to
a prison in El Salvador, even though a judge had issued a ruling expressly prohibiting
that from happening.
But when the news reached the Department of Homeland Security, it set off a days-long
scramble and clashes among officials in three different agencies
over how to deal with what everyone knew had been an error.
As it became clear that keeping it quiet was not an option, DHS officials floated a series
of ideas to control the story that raised alarms among Justice Department lawyers on
the case. Yeah, and Andy, in normal times in the government, when you make a mistake, you just say, oh,
and you fix it.
Yeah.
And then you maybe do a hot sheet on how to not make that mistake again.
But it's very common.
And nobody's, you know, oh, I'm so embarrassed.
Is my face red? Everyone's like, oh, I'm so embarrassed. Is my face red?
Everyone's like, oh, we made this error.
All right, fix it.
And the end.
But when you have an administration peopled with yes men to kind of an oligarch, for all
intents and purposes, a dictator or a dictatorial, you know, leader, you don't acknowledge mistakes.
You don't fix your mistakes.
You double down and mistake harder.
And I think that that's kind of what we're going to be taking a look at here.
In the days before the government's error became public. DHS officials discussed trying to portray
Abrego Garcia as the leader of a violent street gang, MS-13, even though they
couldn't find any evidence to support that claim. They considered ways to
nullify the original order that barred his deportation to El Salvador,
specifically. They sought to downplay the danger he might face in one of that
country's most notorious prisons
These were the plans and in the end a senior Justice Department lawyer a rez
Reveni who counseled bringing a brego garcia back to the United States
Was fired for what attorney general pan bondi said was a failure to zealously advocate on behalf of the United States
This was an administrative error
This was an administrative error. James Percival, a DHS official appointed by Mr. Trump, wrote to his colleagues on March
30th, quote, and in parentheses, not that we should say so publicly, close perence,
close quote.
Trisha McLaughlin, a DHS spokeswoman, said in a statement that Mr. Abrego Garcia's deportation
was part of a, quote, highly sensitive counterterrorism operation with national security implications.
That is stunning.
So as this guy is saying internally, this was an error, don't say anything about it
to anyone.
Externally, they're saying, oh, highly sensitive counter-terrorism operation
with national security implications.
Ultimately, three courts, including the Supreme Court,
pushed back against the White House,
ordering Trump officials to at least take steps
towards freeing Mr. Obrego Garcia.
But Mr. Trump and some of his top aides
have taken a defiant stance,
insisting that Mr. Abrego Garcia will
not be coming back to the United States.
Yeah.
On March 28th, Mr. Percival, the DHS official, told his colleagues that they would be working
to make sure that Abrego Garcia would not return to the United States.
Quote, we're working to fix it so he doesn't need to be returned to the US.
That's what he wrote.
That stuns me.
When I read that the first time I thought, fix it? What is he even talking about? It
becomes clear as you go further into the article. But in that moment, I'm like, how are you
going to fix this? He going to have it? You're going to mysteriously slip on the soap in
the shower and you don't need to bring it back anymore. I mean, what does that even
mean?
But buried between those words is the implication that they actually do need to bring it back anymore. I mean, what does that even mean? But- Well, buried between those words is the implication that they actually do need to
bring them back to the United States, but we're going to fix it so we don't have to.
Right.
Also buried in there is that they could bring him back.
Yeah, very good.
Not anywhere do they say, we can't bring him back because, you know, Bukele
completely controls that place and he won't listen to anything we say.
You don't see that in this article or on these emails anyway.
And if I were Judge Boesberg, I would say, why would you say that you're working to fix it
so you don't need to return him to the US if you're unable to do so in the first place?
Yeah.
Wouldn't you just say, we don't have to fix this because we can't get him back because we don't have custody.
We don't have custody. The guy who has him won't answer our phone calls.
We asked for him back.
They said no, nothing.
None of that.
Yeah.
Now Joseph Mazara, a Trump appointed official serving as the top lawyer at DHS concurred,
quote, we're also trying to keep him where he is.
Oh, does that mean you have control over him?
Okay.
Not everyone was on board though.
Over several days, Mr. Reveni, the Justice Department lawyer we talked about who had
risen up the ranks over more than a decade with the agency, advised colleagues that they
really needed to return Abrego Garcia at once.
One of Mr. Riveni's chief concerns was that Judge Sinis would not look kindly on the fact
that the US government was keeping someone abroad who'd been wrongfully removed.
Quote, I don't think the court will receive the suggestion.
It's fine to keep him there while we sort this out with any sympathy.
He wrote.
And the longer he stays there, the more difficult it becomes for us to hold the
line on this, that this is not our own custody just paid through El Salvadorans.
Wow.
So there's that.
Yeah.
DHS officials said they wanted to solve the problem by trying to reverse the original
order that should have kept Mr. Abrego Garcia from being sent to El Salvador in the first
place. And they wanted to do so while he was still in Salvadoran custody. So, of course,
that was the only order that he had before this whole thing started was a
judge because of his asylum claim had signed an order saying he could be deported but not to El Salvador
because the threat against his life and his family's lives comes from this this gang, Barrio 18 in El Salvador.
Okay, so Mr. Ravini did not agree. Qu quote. How do we reopen his removal proceedings with him abroad?
He asked at that point. He won't have a valid executable order
So what he's saying there is first of all
You can't have a judicial proceeding to get rid of that
No removal to El Salvador order if the guy's not here.
It's his thing. It's his order. And even if you went through that process, you would essentially
invalidate the current order of deportation. It would put everything back on the table again.
And of course, he would have the right to be there arguing for himself.
But right.
Yeah.
And then, you know, Reveni said actually the cleanest solution here is to bring him back
to the United States.
Yeah, there's that.
What we're learning here is that, because we knew Mr. Reveni said in court, we know
what he said in court, and now we're learning what he was saying behind the scenes.
Like what in the absolute H-E hockey sticks are you talking about?
We're going to remove the order.
We're going to open up proceedings for him in El Salvador.
What are you talking about?
He's there by mistake.
He needs to be brought home.
And like, you know, Andy, I'm beginning to see why Trump fired Reveni, right?
Yeah. Already the government appeared to be highly alerted to any possible backlash, Like you know, Andy, I'm beginning to see why Trump fired Ruveni, right? Yeah
Already the government appeared to be highly alerted to any possible backlash publicly over the mistake. Mr Percival for instance had asked his colleagues early on if the DHS spokeswoman had been informed about the comms implications of the case
About the confinement implications. Yeah. Now, how does this look though?
Mr. Percival appeared to quickly realize that withholding the information was not tenable.
A day after telling his colleagues that the government should not admit its error publicly,
he reversed course and suggested the Justice Department's response in court, quote, would
be much better if we could own that we made a mistake.
Quote, but I guess we need to figure out whether we're allowed to say that. He said. Around the same time, officials at DHS began to float the idea internally
that Abrego Garcia was a leader in MS-13, which is a violent street gang at the center
of the president's deportation agenda. If that were the case, it might make leaving
him in El Salvador not legal, but more palatable to the public.
Yeah.
Mr.
Percival asked other officials at one point, whether they could tell
judge Cines that Mr.
Abrego Garcia was an MS 13 leader.
Mr.
Raveni said that they could, but only if someone put their name to the
accusation in a sworn court declaration.
And I'm sure after reading that email,
all the recipients like turned their computers off
and walked out of their offices.
Like not me.
Not me.
In the end, immigration and customs enforcement officials
backed away from the claims.
Quote, so far I have found verified member,
which is included, an ICE lawyer wrote to Mr. Percival.
I have not found anything indicating leader,
but I'll keep looking.
Wow.
Wow.
Yeah, and by the way, a verified member
per that ICE document is anybody with a tattoo
that has a crown or a clock on it.
Or a Chicago Bulls hat and hoodie.
Or a Chicago Bulls hat, right.
And those crown and clock examples
were taken from a 2016 Instagram from a tattoo
artist in the UK on a couple of white dudes.
Yeah.
Meanwhile, Andy, as we've been discussing, MS-13 gang members have played another crucial
role in the agreement between El Salvador and the Trump administration to rent the United
States space at the Seacoat prison complex.
As you know, Trump's Department of Justice has been dismissing charges against
actual MS-13 gang members. And you'll recall that huge Pam Bondi press conference that
you and I talked about. You texted it to me. You brought it up in one of the shows a few
weeks back about charges brought against this notorious MS-13 leader. And they made a big
show out of it. And then they were dismissed. The charges
were dismissed. And on May 22nd, according to Jose Olivares, who's a journalist in Mexico
for The Guardian and The Intercept, the government filed a motion to dismiss the charges against
another MS-13 gang member named Antonio Arovalo Chavez, citing, quote, sensitive and important
foreign policy considerations.
Aerovalo Chavez was a key negotiator with Bukele's government in El Salvador.
And he knows a lot about Bukele's pact, his deal, Bukele's deal with MS-13.
Someone I'm sure Bukele would like to silence.
Now, I think that one of the reasons the Trump administration is so desperate to withhold
that Seacote prison agreement with El Salvador is because it might include an agreement to
hand over people to Bukele that we dismiss charges against so that he can have them and
deal with them as he pleases.
And I think that's the crux of the government's claims of state secrets, privilege privilege and deference to the executive office in matters of foreign affairs,
or as they put it, sensitive and important foreign policy considerations.
It certainly could be. And this, you know, we've literally been talking about this since the very
first couple of episodes of Unjustified. Even without the context of Abrego Garcia
and all these other cases, those early days,
I thought like, this is a really concerning thing.
It started with the MS-13 guy who was pending trial
being held in New York.
I can't remember his name now,
but he had been cooperating with the government for a while
and allegedly telling them a lot of information
about Bukele.
His case got dismissed
first. Then you had the guy you referred to is arrested here in Virginia. They had the big
nonsensical press conference out at the FBI sub office in Virginia where Patel was there, Bondi,
all these people. And they never mentioned the name of the person that they were pounding their
chests about having arrested earlier that morning. His case has now been dismissed. And now we have this third one. This is a huge departure
from the way the Department of Justice prosecutes what we used to call transnational criminal
enterprise members, gang members, what they're now trying to sell us as terrorists, which is another whole problem,
to finally to build cases, arresting these people, putting them in jail, you prosecute
them.
You go through the process, you give them their due process rights, you make the best
case you can.
And if you can convict them, you make them stay here and serve that sentence.
That's what we do.
These people are likely being handed over
because Bukele wants to know what they said to us
or whatever information they have.
But any one of them, if it's true that these are people
who were entered into agreements with the Bukele government,
what's to stop them from entering into another agreement,
getting let out a C code and coming right back here
and committing the same crimes again.
Yeah.
Speaking of that, I mean, that's why I wouldn't put it past him.
I mean, Trump and Pam Bondi made a deal with the son of El Chapo in the San Aloha Cartel
to here's a bunch of money and bring your 17 friends and family over to the United States
to live in exchange for, you know, this particular,
uh, another, another Narco, uh, Kingpin. Yeah. It's, um, yeah, I, I just feel like this is
a really disturbing departure from the way that DOJ has always done this business. And,
um, yeah, but when you have an oligarch making a deal with oligarchs,
but Kayleigh is an oligarch, cartel leaders are oligarchs.
I mean, this is what you get.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Very frightening to me.
And then you're asking to edit
and falsify intelligence findings to.
Smooth it all over, make it all look good.
Yeah.
On the surface.
So that you can justify what you're doing as legal.
All right, we've got just a couple more quick stories and of course, listener questions.
By the way, if you have a question, there's a link in the show notes where you can click
on to submit your questions to me and Andy.
Excuse me, Andy and me.
And we'll be right back with more information, including a federal judge in Boston going
after the Trump administration for yet another problem with renditions to a third party country.
Stick around.
We'll be right back.
Welcome back.
Okay.
Just a couple more stories before we get to listener questions. First,
from the Times, a federal judge in Boston said on Wednesday that the Trump administration
had violated an order he issued last month, barring officials from deporting people to
countries not their own without first giving them sufficient time to object. There's that
pesky due process.
What the? Yeah. Poking its head again. without first giving them sufficient time to object. There's that pesky due process
from the corner that's poking its head again.
I would have gotten away with it
if it weren't for that pesky due process, fella.
Darn.
Okay, so finding by the judge, Brian E. Murphy,
isn't a classic, a judge in Boston
has the name Brian E. Murphy.
I mean, of course he does.
This is like right out of a movie.
Brian E. Murphy was one of the strongest judicial rebukes
that the administration has faced so far
in a series of contentious cases
arising from its sprawling deportation agenda.
It was not immediately clear what punishment, if any,
Judge Murphy intended to mete out against the administration
or those who took part in the operation,
but he asked for a list of names of everyone involved
so he could notify them
that they might face criminal contempt penalties.
That's what we're talking about.
For a full report on this hearing and the case, we recommend heading to law fair for
details and to support their work if you're able.
Yeah.
And he was real mad too.
I think he used the word contempt like a hundred times in that particular hearing.
He's like, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And then I think he's learned a little bit of a lesson from previous attempts at this
administration.
He's like, all right, so what does this look like?
What does due process look like for these folks who are now in Djibouti, stopped on
a plane, on their way to war-torn South Sudan, the country that none of them hail from, to have a
fear, a rational or reasonable fear hearing. I can't remember what it's
called, something a fear hearing. I talked about it with Adam Klassfeld, but he was
like, I'm not just gonna let you figure out what reasonable is. And they wanted
to go, the government wanted to go by some old case that I had never heard of,
and he's like, look, we've got plenty from this Supreme Court from like the last
couple of weeks saying that, that 24 hours is not enough notice and you gave them 17.
So no, it's not reasonable. This is contemptuous. Give me a list of all the people that were
involved in this after the Supreme Court ruling came down saying 24 hours is not sufficient
notice. I want names and we need to sit here and figure out what the remedy is. Are you going to give
them a hearing down on the plane in Djibouti? You've got to keep them for two weeks there
to give them enough time. Are there going to be translators for them to speak to counsel?
He got down into the nitty gritty, which hasn't really happened in a court before at the district
level. They've just been like, well, just give meaningful notice. You can figure out
what that is. They aren't taking the government's word for it anymore.
Yeah, this one is crazy because one of the earlier, maybe the first hearing he had on
this was when the planes were allegedly in flight or taking off or whatever. And he said,
turn them around or stop them and make sure you tell the pilots
that they could be held in criminal contempt if they continue.
So I wonder if that's why the plane ended up stopped in Djibouti rather than just
like, you know, damn, the torpedo is going all the way to cartoon.
And then the most recent hearing, he was really focused on like
the condition of the detainees.
Are they like shackled to their seats in this plane day in, day out?
Do they even get off the plane?
You know, do they get to eat?
Like he included in his order that they must be held under humanitarian conditions or something
like that.
I don't remember the phrasing, but yeah, he's really, he's going all in on this and good for him.
Yeah, he's pretty mad. Next up, quick story from NBC. The Justice Department is dismissing
lawsuits against a number of local police departments around the country, ending investigations
into patterns and practices of unconstitutional behavior that violates civil rights. And that's
according to officials on Wednesday. Andy, you and I saw this coming a mile away
when Harmeet Dhillon took over the civil rights unit
at the Justice Department.
These are all like when they look at,
investigate Louisville and Memphis
and police departments for bad behavior
and then issue consent decrees
that these departments have to follow.
The pullback from police oversight comes amid a major change at the Justice
Department Civil Rights Division since the start of the Trump administration
and the confirmation of Harmeet Dhillon, Trump's pick to lead the division.
Officials said lawsuits filed during Joe Biden's administration by Merrick
Carlin against two city police departments, Louisville, Kentucky,
and Minneapolis would be dismissed.
They've also canceled active consent decrees.
Other investigations into policing in Phoenix,
Trenton, New Jersey, Memphis, Tennessee,
Mount Vernon, New York, Oklahoma City,
and Louisiana State Police will also come to an end.
They're just ending them.
Not interested in that work anymore.
Not interested in forcing the Voting Rights Act.
They just should change the name to the No Longer Civil. It's just like the, they just should change the name
to the No Longer Civil Rights Division or something like that
because it's a, it's a 180 degree turnaround
from why that division was created, you know,
in the early 1960s for the purpose of securing voting rights
for black people in the South.
Yeah.
Okay, so also from CBS, we get,
the Justice Department is shaking up the priorities
for a popular grant program that provides millions
of dollars in aid to budget strapped local police
departments across America, according to public documents
reviewed by CBS News.
In a fact sheet for the Community Policing Development
micro-grant program, the Trump administration
eliminated language that
encouraged police agencies to seek federal money for initiatives to help underserved populations,
build trust in the police, boost diversity in police departments, and support community violence
intervention. Yep, the instructions to local police departments now for funding in 2025 mark a
noticeable shift from the guidance issued by the DOJ during the Biden administration Yep, the instructions to local police departments now for funding in 2025 mark a noticeable
shift from the guidance issued by the DOJ during the Biden administration because the
2024 guidance under the Biden administration prioritized efforts at building trust and
legitimacy with communities and community violence intervention initiatives, which include
efforts to combat racism and trauma and poverty and other triggers to violence.
Instead, this administration lists immigration
and border security, violent crime prevention, and uplifting the image of the law enforcement
profession as, unless you're a Capitol police officer, I guess, as programs that are priorities
for the highly sought after grants, which are administered by the Justice Department's
community oriented policing services division. So they're going from
community outreach, mental health, equity, inclusion, diverse policing, et cetera, to
we want the cops to look good and immigration. That's where the grants are going to be focused
from now on. Yeah. and really this was the only hope
for the police organizations
that took advantage of this funding.
This is really the only chance they had of doing that
because the budgets are so tight
in law enforcement across the board.
There's just no, there's no room for things like this
that aren't directly contributing to additional arrests.
Yeah.
There's no opportunity to try to do deescalation training.
There's no opportunity to seek alternative results.
And look at all the calls the police officers have to take
regarding people in the midst of a mental health crisis. There's been so much talk about
trying to think about better, less confrontational ways to resolve those incidents. Forget it.
You can forget all that.
Right.
Because there's no money. It ain't happening.
I had a woman on from the Urban Peace Institute on the beans who was afraid that their grants
were in jeopardy. And this pretty much confirms that they are,
unless you're doing, unless you're helping ICE out,
you're not gonna get any funding.
Yeah, very, very, very different priorities now.
All right, shall we hit some questions?
Yeah, time for some questions.
Who do we have sending in questions today?
Well, we had a lot of people sending them in,
would love to go through all of them, but of course, we don't have time for that.
But, um, so I picked two that I thought were pretty interesting and touch on
things that you and I've talked about a lot.
So first one comes from Aaron.
Aaron says, I have a question about Jack Smith and Merrick Garland.
Do you think this administration is just picking low hanging fruit to harass?
The silence from Ed Martin, Bondi, and the merry band of sycophants about Jack and Merrick
is deafening.
Do you think that they are trying to get momentum with easier cases before touching that flame?
It seems they're afraid with these two.
What are your thoughts as to why the silence?
Aside from the obvious idiocy of it all.
Yeah, aside from the obvious idiocy of it all. Aside from the obvious idiocy.
Well, that was going to be my answer, Aaron.
So I don't really have anything.
Well, I think that they have kind of sort of peripherally gone after Jack Smith by attacking
lawyers and law firms where lawyers who have worked with Jack Smith work at same with Mueller,
right? They went after a law firm
that's Weissman who worked for Mueller years ago, worked at for a minute, but now hasn't worked
there in years. So I think they're sort of peripherally kind of coming at this. I don't
think they'll go after Merrick Garland necessarily because I think enough people on the left already
don't like that guy. And I don't think they need to go after him the way that they would
probably need to go after like Jack Smith or Jim Comey or you know, anybody else who
who might be within earshot of my voice that I could be talking to right now that might've had more direct involvement
in investigating Donald Trump.
So, cause you know, Merrick Garland notoriously did not
appoint a special counsel until November, 2022.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think that's true.
I think also, Erin, I would say patience.
Have patience because we are still in early days here.
And I do feel like as we get deeper and deeper
into this administration, the revenge actions will grow.
That's not the kind of, you would normally think like,
oh, they come in all full of you know what and vinegar
and then that'll kind of tail off.
That's not gonna happen here.
It's the other way around because they have things
that they need to get done politically up on the hill.
They know that some of these moves
will probably provoke a lot of criticism.
And so I feel like they're holding their fire
on some of this stuff right now to get past
like the big, beautiful bill and other things
they wanna get done.
And they're really focused on immigration.
So this, these things may emerge, um, as we go forward as, as, uh, Ed Martin comes up with his list of whatever he's going to do to people who can't
even charge a lot of talk online about he's got some lists that he's supposedly
coming out with soon, so who knows?
We'll see if there's more developments there.
But I would say we are, well, Ed, I'm sorry, not Ed,
Jack and Merit are definitely not out of the woods yet.
That's a good point.
That is a good point.
All right, so last one is from Chuck.
Chuck says, AG and AM, your clarity and erudition
on subjects of national importance is hugely
appreciated.
Please keep it up.
My question is, since the Constitution defines birthright citizenship and other provisions,
and it defines the means of modifying the Constitution by the amendment process, why
are Trump's EOs or other administrations' unconstitutional actions not simply dead in
the water.
It seems to me that the only thing to determine
is whether the said action is or is not constitutional.
If it's not, it's done and has no legality.
Why not have that question resolved immediately
and then forego all the litigations,
stays, injunctions, what have you?
Well, the only way to answer that question is
through litigation, which comes with stays and injunctions and all of that jazz.
Dead in the water, somebody has to dub it dead in the water and the someone who
does that is ultimately the Supreme Court. Yeah, and I guess the thing that I
would highlight to you here, Chuck, and it's kind of an unsatisfying answer, but it's super important, is what you're frustrated about.
And I get it, it's slow, but is the process.
The process is really important.
The process is you can only bring an action if you have a stake in the matter and you have what we call standing.
if you have a stake in the matter and you have what we call standing, and you can only bring it to a court that actually has jurisdiction over that issue and that decision.
And the first thing that you can do is get a stay to make the government stop doing the
thing that you allege is illegal.
But then the government is allowed to fight that, file their own appeals when they don't
get a judgment that they like on just the issue of the stay.
So all this takes a long time and it seems to infinitely delay the decision on the underlying substantive
issue. And I know that's frustrating, but the process and each side's free and fair
access to it is what makes us a democracy. So we have to really, you know, in the words of Tim Snyder, to support our institutions,
one of those institutions is the system of justice. We have to support it and embrace
staying with the normal order, because we don't break it for ourselves and we don't break it for
the tyrants on the other side. And it is that maintenance to the standard, staying true to the principles of justice
and obeying court orders even when we don't like them, that's what keeps us from veering
off the cliff into tyranny.
And even though it takes a long time, hang in there with us, At least we'll, we'll make you laugh talking
about it on unjustified.
So we don't cry. Right. Yeah, exactly.
Yeah. The Alien Enemies Act proclamation was issued two months ago and we still don't have
a Supreme Court ruling on the legality of the invocation of the Alien Enemies Act. But we should be getting one
soon even though James Ho really, really, really, really, really, really doesn't want
to do it. He's got to do it on an expedited basis at the Fifth Circuit, which will ultimately
make its way up to the Supreme Court.
And then we've got all these contempt proceedings. And in order to get into contempt proceedings,
you have to have discovery. And in order to get into discovery, you have to resolve threshold issues like privilege,
for example. This is just the order of operations and the normal order and it's what we're trying
to preserve. So it would be weird to circumvent due process, to seek due process. Yeah. Birthright citizenship is another great example.
Like almost everyone, conservative or liberal,
legal pundits and stuff, will say the order is almost 100%,
not 100%, but like everyone says it's gonna be declared
unconstitutional, it should be.
It's clearly unconstitutional.
But the Trump team, they're the champions of delay.
If you listen to Jack, you totally know that.
They did a masterful move here by saddling the issue with this other issue of, quote
unquote, universal injunctions, challenging the judiciary's ability to issue an injunction
and stop the alleged unlawful conduct from taking place across the country. And by doing that, they just, you know, the
Supreme Court bit on that in the same way they did the underlying legality of the birthright
citizenship decree. So now we have to like work through both of those.
Yeah. And it's a bad vehicle and the liberal justices recognize it as a bad vehicle, just
as they recognized the immunity ruling as a bad vehicle to make a rule for future presidents.
When they should have just been considering that particular case, they blew that out of
the water and gave double barrel middle fingers to DICTA and just went on their own way to
create a rule based on no need to do that, to do so. So that's kind
of, I mean, we also have to, a lot of this has to do with who's sitting on the Supreme
Court right now.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
But yeah, here we are anyway.
But we don't, the way to respond to all those frustrations is to stay in the fight. It is
not to upend the boat and say, screw it, let's just start ruling
on these things by fiat.
We have to be, if you're concerned about justice
and you're concerned about the future,
the answer is to hold tight to the process
and insist, insist that everyone follows it.
Right.
Like the reason that we're all shocked and disgusted
at the arrest of Roz Baraka, for example,
is because they didn't do a thorough investigation
and bring evidence and interviews to a grand jury
and then go through all of the motions
that they're supposed to go through.
They just arrested and then tried to figure it out later,
ended up dropping the charges
because they knew they didn't have anything.
That's what people wanted Merrick Garland to do to Donald Trump, but that's not how it
works.
Donald Trump would have walked just like Ross Baraka walked and without all of that process
that has to go into it.
Now, I mean, we can talk about why it took longer than it probably should have.
Different issue for a different day.
But you know, to say, you know, that's why we aren't like, why that's why Hillary locked
or shut down the lock him up chance at the DNC.
Like that's not us.
And, and Kamala Harris kept saying, I'll leave that up to the justice department.
Right here, right now we're talking about something else. So yeah, it's important to apply these things to both sides because they got to be
the same.
That's what we're fighting for. We want everybody to be treated fairly. Right now, we're sliding
into a place where they're not. And so we have to stick with the concept of fairness.
So Chuck, I get your frustration. I told you. I'm also frustrated.
Relate to you, bro.
We are all frustrated, but we gotta hang in there.
Although I do think some of these judges
could get to contempt faster,
but like the court schedule,
the fact that we just have so few judges on the bench.
And they all know, in a normal contempt issue
comes up like in a civil case or something
like that, they just slice and dice it.
But they know whatever whoever loses is taking it to the circuit court, then they're going
to hear the issue and whoever loses there is probably going to push it to the Supreme
Court.
So everybody's trying to be very careful.
I just wish they sliced and diced at the same speed.
Yeah, yeah.
For any for anyone and everyone. That would be nice because that,
that gives the rest of us a feeling that there is an equal justice under law. People get
more deaf, people like Trump get more deference and more time, more appeals and more. And
that's just, that's just very unfair. As judge Ho said, the justice might as well not be
blindfolded anymore. What is this a A Denny's? Sorry, I
can't get over what you wrote.
I want to play my tiny violin for him every time I hear that line.
Yeah. Why don't you spend a day in Seacoat, Judge Ho?
Yeah.
And then let us know how that goes.
Or how about this? Spend a day in a Raymond court and pick your district. I mean, like
that's where, you know,
in your lofty tower at the fifth circuit.
Can't be expected to answer things by the crack of noon.
Yeah, I know.
I've arranged plenty of people on Saturday morning.
You know, when I was an Asian, I'm not the judge,
but you take, you know, people get picked up.
People are working.
There's a judge on that day, gets heard, they go.
Crime doesn't take a break.
That's right.
24-7, it's like a Denny's.
It's like a Denny's.
Crime is like a Denny's.
I think I'm gonna make a...
I think we have a new title.
Crime is like a Denny's.
All right, I'm writing it down.
Everybody, we're gonna be back in your ears,
gosh, next week.
I'm sure nothing will
happen between now and then.
Another slow week.
Yeah, it'll be another slow week and I'm sure it'll just be like a 10 minute episode next
time. At least we can only hope, but I bet the opposite be true. Do you have any final
thoughts?
No, I've exhausted all my thoughts, but yeah, buckling.
All right. We'll see you next week. I've been Alison Gill.
And I'm Andy McCabe.
Unjustified is written and executive produced
by Alison Gill with additional research
and analysis by Andrew McCabe.
Sound design and editing is by Molly Hockey
with art and web design by Joel Reeder
at Moxie Design Studios.
The theme music for Unjustified is written
and performed by Ben Folds.
And the show is a proud member of the MSW Media Network,
a collection of creator-owned independent podcasts dedicated to news, politics and justice. For more information,
please visit MSWMedia.com.