Letters from an American - September 2, 2025
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September 2, 2025.
In the early hours of Sunday morning,
in the middle of a three-day holiday weekend,
the Trump administration attempted to take children
out of government custody and shipped them alone
to their country of origin, Guatemala.
On Friday, Priscilla Alvarez of CNN
broke the story that the administration
was planning to move up to 600 children from the custody of the Office of Refugee Resettlement,
or ORR, where they are held according to law until they can be released to a relative or a guardian
living in the U.S. who can take care of them while their case for asylum in the U.S. is being
processed. ORR is an agency within the Department of Health and Human Services.
Its mission, according to its website, is to promote the health, well-being.
and stability of refugees, unaccompanied alien children, and other eligible individuals and families
through culturally responsive, trauma-informed, and strengths-based services.
Our vision is for all new arrivals to be welcomed with equitable, high-quality services and resources
so they can maximize their potential.
Alvarez notes that unaccompanied migrant children are considered a vulnerable population.
and are covered by the 2008 Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act.
That law gives them enhanced protections and care,
making sure they are screened to see if they've been trafficked
or are afraid of persecution in the country they come from.
Congress has specified that such children can be removed from the country
only under special circumstances.
Nonetheless, the administration appears to have removed
about 76 of these children from the custody of ORR, the only agency with legal authority to hold them,
where they were waiting to be released to a relative or guardian, and transferred them to immigration and
customs enforcement, or ICE. Once they were in ICE custody, the administration planned to put them on flights
to Guatemala, where they may face abuse, neglect, persecution, or even torture, according to a U.S. court.
At about 1 o'clock in the morning, Eastern Time, on Sunday, August 31st, advocates for the children
filed a suit to prevent the administration from removing them. Shortly after 2.30 in the
morning, Judge Sparkle Sukhnan got a phone call about the case, and by 4 o'clock she had issued an
emergency order blocking the removal and scheduling a hearing for 3 o'clock that afternoon.
She moved it up to 1230 when she learned that the administration was already moving some children out of
the country. Legal analyst Anna Bauer was on the call for the hearing and reported that
Suknan said, I got to call it 2.36 a.m. because the government chose the wee hours of the
morning on the Sunday of Labor Day weekend to execute a plan to move these children. That's why
we're here. And I tried to reach the government. I've been up since then and didn't reach anyone
from the government until later this morning. And the imminence that the plaintiff claimed proved true.
because in fact those planes were loaded.
One actually took off and was returned.
And so, absent action and intervention by the court,
all of those children would have been returned to Guatemala,
potentially to extremely dangerous situations.
Some of the children were actually in a plane to be removed
while the hearing was underway.
Suknananin required the government to report to her
when each child was back in ORR custody.
By noon Monday, according to the government's lawyers, all the children were back in ORR custody.
The rush to deport children in the middle of the night on a holiday weekend, in apparent violation of the law,
looked a great deal like the administration's removal of undocumented immigrants from Venezuela
to the notorious terrorist Seacot prison in El Salvador in March.
At the time, President Donald J. Trump denied that he had signed the order invoking the 17th,
98 Alien Enemies Act the administration used to justify the rendition of the men to El Salvador.
Other people handled it, he said, even though his signature is on the document that appears in the
Federal Register. Trump's apparent distance from that earlier removal comes to mind now because
the other big story over Labor Day weekend was Trump's relative disappearance from public view
since last Tuesday. As Garrett Graff of Doomsday scenario recorded, Trump, who normally talks to the
press as often as possible, had no public appearances on Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday,
Sunday, or Monday. Coming on top of Vice President J.D. Vance's odd comment in an interview with
USA Today last week that he was ready to be president if needed. I've gotten a lot of good on-the-job training
over the past 200 days, he said.
Rumors flew.
Over the weekend,
Is Trump Dead?
Was one of Google's top searches?
Although he posted,
Never felt better in my life
on social media on Sunday,
Trump continued to keep a long distance
between himself and the press.
Trump appeared today in the Oval Office,
an hour late,
to announce he would move
Space Force headquarters
from Colorado to Alabama,
apparently to put
the rumors of his ill health to rest. At the event, Trump referred to the recent court decision
declaring many of his tariffs illegal, saying that, if you took away tariffs, we could end up
being a third world country. In fact, the country's economy has slowed significantly since
Trump instituted his tariffs, and Trump's agenda continues to take hits. Yesterday, nine
former directors of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or CDC, who served under both
Democratic and Republican presidents reaching back to President Jimmy Carter, published an op-ed in
the New York Times, warning that Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., is
endangering every American's health. William Fagie, William Roper, David Satcher, Jeffrey Copeland,
Richard Bessor, Tom Frieden, Ann Shookett,
Rochelle P. Wollensky and Mandy K. Cohen
listed their concerns about Kennedy's policies.
He has fired thousands of federal health workers
and severely weakened programs designed to protect Americans
from cancer, heart attacks, strokes,
lead poisoning, injury, violence, and more, they wrote.
Amid the largest measles outbreak in the United States,
states in a generation, he's focused on unproven treatments while downplaying vaccines.
He canceled investments in promising medical research that will leave us ill-prepared for future
health emergencies. He replaced experts on federal health advisory committees with
unqualified individuals who share his dangerous and unscientific views. He announced the end
of U.S. support for global vaccination programs that protect millions of children,
and keep Americans safe, citing flawed research and making inaccurate statements.
Any champion federal legislation that will cause millions of people with health insurance through
Medicaid to lose their coverage. Kennedy's firing of CDC director Dr. Susan Menares last
Wednesday, a firing Trump approved, appears to have been the event that spurred the former
directors to speak up as a group. They wrote that what Kennedy
has done to the CDC and to public health in the U.S. since taking office is, unlike anything we had ever
seen at the agency, and unlike anything our country had ever experienced. The former CDC directors
warned that the health of every American is at risk. They urged Congress to exercise its
authority over the Department of Health and Human Services, state and local governments and
private philanthropy to cover the funding Kennedy has killed and physicians to support their
patients. And they called upon all Americans to look out for one another. A post on Trump's social
media account yesterday morning seemed to try to blame drug companies for letting everyone rip themselves
apart, including Bobby Kennedy Jr. and CDC, suggesting that administration officials are
aware that there is a political backlash brewing over the administration's assault on public
health. The administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, Lee Zeldon, says the administration
is deliberately driving a dagger straight into the heart of the climate change religion.
Today, more than 85 scientists released a joint review of the U.S. Department of Energy's
new climate report, saying it was biased, full of errors.
and not fit to inform policy-making.
Trump's attempt to defend Russian President Vladimir Putin
took another hit yesterday
when Russia appeared to jam the GPS of an airplane
carrying European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen to Bulgaria.
The European Commission is the executive branch of the European Union,
which has stood firm against Russia's invasion of Ukraine
and continues to support Ukraine.
Russia appears to have been jamming plane,
GPS in the airspace around the Baltic coast since it invaded Ukraine again in 2022, but denies it is
doing so. A source told the Financial Times that the pilots of the plane carrying von der Leyen
had to land using paper maps. Today, Judge Breyer of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District
of California ruled that Trump, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegeseth, and the Department of Defense
acted illegally when they used the Marines and the National Guard in Los Angeles, California.
As legal analyst Bauer noted, whether their deployment of the military is legal is a separate case
now pending before the Ninth Circuit. Judge Breyer noted that Congress had spoken clearly
when it passed the Posse Comitatis Act in 1878, prohibiting the use of the U.S. military to execute
domestic law. Nevertheless, the judge wrote,
At defendant's orders, and contrary to Congress's explicit instruction, federal troops executed
the laws. Evidence at trial showed that armed soldiers set up protective perimeters and traffic
blockages, engaged in crowd control, and otherwise demonstrated a military presence in and around
Los Angeles. In short, he concluded, the defendants violated the Posse Cometatus Act.
Breyer noted that 300 troops still remain in Los Angeles, and he warned that Trump and Hagsith have stated their intention to call National Guard troops into federal service in other cities across the country, thus creating a national police force with the president as its chief.
The judge prohibited the defendants from deploying, ordering, instructing, training, or using the National Guard currently deployed in California.
and any military troops heretofore deployed in California to execute the laws,
including, but not limited to, engaging in arrests, apprehensions, searches,
seizures, security patrols, traffic control, crowd control, riot control, evidence collection,
interrogation, or acting as informants.
Breyer stayed the order until noon on September 12th to give the administration time to appeal.
Yesterday, Americans turned out across the country to protest Trump and the administration,
and popular anger at government overreach may be showing in the legal system as well.
Six times now, federal grand juries have declined to indict defendants
picked up in connection with Trump's deployment of troops in Washington, D.C.
Although right-wing media is slamming Judge James Bosberg today
for releasing Natalie Rose Jones after she made threats again,
Trump. A grand jury refused to indict her. More famously, a grand jury last week refused to indict
Sean Dunn, the former Justice Department paralegal who threw a submarine sandwich at a Customs
and Border Protection officer. The government charged Dunn with felony assault, for which he would have
faced up to eight years in prison if convicted. Although officers tackled Dunn at the scene,
the government later posted a dramatic video of heavily armed law enforcement officers going to Dunn's apartment to arrest him.
As Liz Oyer, a former pardon attorney for the Department of Justice, said,
what's so extraordinary about this is it shows that we the citizens are the last line of defense for our democracy.
And we, the citizens, are standing strong.
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.
This is the world.