Letters from an American - Destroying the Rule of Law
Episode Date: June 3, 2026June 2, 2026Administration officials have repeatedly tried to limit access to detention centers across the country, Detainees at the Delaney Hall detention center in New Jersey start a hunger strike t...o protest dangerous conditions and the lack of access to the legal system, New Jersey’s attorney general is suing the GEO Group which operates Delaney Hall, The destruction of the rule of law at Delaney Hall is part of the larger effort by the Trump administration to destroy it across the country, The newly appointed acting director of national intelligence, who has no relevant expertise, is willing to use the government to persecute Trump’s perceived enemies, Trump’s slush fund will be dropped but the DOJ is not dropping the plan to provide tax amnesty to the Trumps, Secretary of Homeland Security refuses to commit to abide by court rulings, Former Border Patrol chief Gregory Bovino publicly embraces white nationalism, claiming that 100 million people in the US must be removed and going after government and elected officials.Watch today's recording here: https://www.youtube.com/live/g9TUa1Rwd6U?si=T8_KKcHQZElhpnZ-Get full, free access to Letters from an American here: https://heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribeYou can also find me:Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/hcrichardson.bsky.socialInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/heathercoxrichardson/?hl=enFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/heathercoxrichardson/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@heathercoxrichardson Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe
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June 2, 26. Officials in the Trump administration have worked hard to restrict the access of members of Congress
to the detention centers it is established across the country. Although lawmakers have a constitutional duty
to oversee executive agencies, and courts have reiterated their authority to conduct unannounced visits
to federal immigration facilities, officials have repeatedly tried to limit that access.
Last May, they went so far as to arrest Mayor Ross Baraka of Newark, Newark,
for trespassing after he waited inside the gate of the privately operated Delaney Hall detention center,
where a staffer had asked him to stand after he accompanied three members of Congress to Delaney Hall,
and then stepped outside when asked to leave.
After they dropped the charges against Baraka days later,
they charged Representative La Monica McGuiver, a Democrat of New Jersey,
Jersey with assault for her actions during a skirmish that broke out with immigration agents arrested
Baraka. On May 11, 26, Todd Lyons, the acting director of Immigrations and Customs Enforcement,
or ICE, tried again, issuing a memo that calls congressional visits disruptive and saying ICE will
facilitate meetings of lawmakers with people in detention only if the lawmaker can specifically
identify the individual in detention and provide valid proof that the detainee consents to a visit.
Any such visit, they said, will require two days' advance notice.
On May 22nd, after writing letters to call attention to the crowded and unsanitary conditions
inside Delaney Hall, the largest detention center in the Northeast, about 300 detainees began a hunger
strike to demand the immediate release of young, elderly, and medically vulnerable detainees,
and to bring attention to the fact that immigration judges are ignoring their cases, leaving
them incarcerated. While much of the protest focuses on the horrific conditions inside the facility,
the detainees themselves have focused on their lack of access to the legal system. They wrote,
we see with deep helplessness and frustration that our due process, rights, and defense have been violated,
disregarding benefits granted under the Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Amendments of the United States Constitution.
We are certain that we are not being processed equally under immigration laws and the Constitution.
We have seen judges in this detention center who are ready to carry out deportations and mass.
expulsions without properly reviewing cases. We live with anguish and fear of appearing in court.
We are witnessing how judges are disregarding decisions of federal judges, for example, not honoring
habeas corpus rulings decided by a federal judge, depriving us of our liberty.
They asked for help from senators and members of Congress and said,
we trust in God and believe that justice will be done under the law of the United States of America,
since it is a sovereign and constitutional country, respected worldwide for upholding human rights.
Since the Delaney Hall detainees began their strike, supporters outside have gathered to show support.
Federal agents have clashed with them repeatedly, pepper spraying Senator Andy Kim, a Democrat of New Jersey,
Jersey, among others. MAGA activists went to the site to counter protest, and Mayor Baraka
established a curfew near the facility. Late last week, Governor Mikey Sherrill, a Democrat,
deployed New Jersey state troopers after White House advisor Tom Holman, a former consultant for
Delaney Hall operator Geo Group, threatened to send tactical units to New Jersey if the situation continued.
The troopers arrested dozens of protesters.
Today, New Jersey Attorney General Jennifer Davenport sued the GEO group for refusing to allow inspectors into the facility in violation of state law.
If the GEO group, with a $1 billion government contract, has nothing to hide and the conditions inside Delaney Hall are as safe and as sanitary as this private corporation and the Trump administration,
claim, then there is no legitimate reason why my health inspectors are being kept from
full access throughout the building, Cheryl said. The people of New Jersey deserve transparency
and accountability, and I will continue using all the power of this office to advocate for the
detainees and their families. In a May 29th interview with me on American Conversations,
Senator Kim said that,
the detainees were actually very clear with me.
They're concerned about the conditions,
but the main reason they're pushing forward right now
on this hunger strike and broader protest
is about the lack of forward movement
when it comes to their cases.
I remember one of them ran out of the room
when I was talking to them
to go grab a piece of paper off a bulletin board.
The paper, when they brought it back,
was about the court docket for the following day.
And it showed that this past Tuesday, when the courts opened up after the holiday weekend, this one judge that they are put in front of has 74 cases before her in just that one day, just on Tuesday.
She had 74 cases on her docket.
You know, I did the math.
I mean, that's roughly about five minutes per case if everything is perfectly aligned.
It's just a farce.
This is not actual justice.
this is not actual legal proceedings as per our Constitution and as per our laws.
The destruction of the rule of law in Delaney Hall is part of the Trump administration's destruction of the rule of law across the United States.
This morning, Trump announced he is appointing the director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, William Pulte,
to become the acting director of national intelligence, in addition to his job.
at the Federal Housing Finance Agency.
The Director of National Intelligence
is the nation's top intelligence official,
and federal law requires
that the director have extensive national security expertise.
Pulte has none.
What he does have is willingness to use the power of the government
to persecute Trump's perceived political enemies.
It was Pulte, who came up with a scheme of going
after Federal Reserve Board member Lisa Cook and New York Attorney General Letitia James
by accusing them of mortgage fraud. He also advocated investigating then Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell
for alleged overruns in the renovation of Federal Reserve buildings. Today, under pressure
from Senate Republicans who recognize that the optics of Trump's $1.776 billion slush,
fund will hurt Republicans in the midterms and demanding the removal of that funding from the budget
reconciliation measure they are working on to fund ICE and Customs and Border Protection, or CBP.
Trump appears to have dropped that demand. But acting Attorney General Todd Blanche told members of
Congress today that he would not commit in writing not to proceed with the slush fund
and that the Department of Justice is not dropping the plan to provide Trump,
his family and the Trump organization broad amnesty for any laws broken in past tax filings and a pass on future audits.
Just after midnight this morning, Trump posted that his criminal conviction on 34 counts of falsifying business records
and the civil fraud judgment against him in New York for manipulating his financial statements to get better tax and insurance rates,
be dismissed, saying he was an innocent man who has been horribly treated.
As Sophie Brams of the Hill noted, he also called for criminal charges to be launched
against New York Attorney General James and Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg,
who brought the successful lawsuits.
Today, the new Secretary of Homeland Security, Mark Wayne Mullen,
refused to assure a U.S. Senate Appropriations Committee
that the Department of Homeland Security, or DHS, would follow court orders.
Repeatedly, he told Senator Chris Murphy, a Democrat of Connecticut,
that DHS will never break the Constitution and were not going to break the law,
but he refused to agree that they would follow court orders.
If we didn't think courts were politicized, then I would probably be able to answer that, Mullen said.
But we see courts over and over again that use their bench for their political opinion, not just the rule of law.
Kyle Cheney of Politico reported last month that the Trump administration has lost nearly 10,400 court cases over DHS immigration detentions.
while prevailing in about 1,200. That translates to a 90% loss rate. More than 425 judges, an overwhelming
majority of them, have decided against the administration. Cheney notes that even a majority of the
judges Trump himself appointed have decided against the administration on immigration.
In February, then DHS spokesperson, Tricia McLaughlin, explained away the administration's dismal record
by saying that many activist judges have attempted to thwart President Trump
from fulfilling the American people's mandate for mass deportations.
But Judge Joseph R. Goodwin of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of West Virginia
wrote, Antiseptic judicial rhetoric cannot do justice to what is happening.
Across the interior of the United States, agents of the federal government,
masked, anonymous, armed with military weapons, operating from unmarked vehicles,
acting without warrants of any kind, are seizing persons for civil immigration violations,
and imprisoning them without any semblance of due process.
It is an assault on the constitutional order.
Today, after Mullen wouldn't agree to obey the courts,
suggesting instead that we'll hold each other accountable
if ice breaks the law,
Senator Murphy said,
Listen, if you're a Republican or Democrat on this committee,
you should be really, really freaked out.
Former Border Patrol Chief Gregory Bevino,
who oversaw the operations during which federal agents
shot and killed American citizens Renee Good and Alex Pretti,
joined white nationalist Jared Taylor
at a conference of far-right activists and influencers
in Portugal over the weekend.
As Marion Saletti of Politico reported, in an interview before the conference, Bavino embraced the white nationalism of the Great Replacement Theory that says white Europeans and white Americans are in a fight to save their civilization from black and brown people.
He claimed that of the 342 million people in the U.S., he said there were 420 million,
100 million are undocumented immigrants who must be removed.
But, he added,
Our main battle is not with undocumented immigrants or unassimilated immigrants.
It is with the bureaucrats of the status quo and the timid politicians.
determined to suspend action or wait for the next election cycle.
If there is inspiration gained from the U.S. Border Patrol model and method, he said,
then fantastic.
Letters from an American was written and read by Heather Cox Richardson.
It was produced at Soundscape Productions, Dead in Massachusetts.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.
Thank you.
