A newly declassified memo further cuts against the administrations case for summary deportations under the wartime law.
Trumpâs Alien Enemies Act invocation gets even more dubious with new evidence www.msn.com/en-us/news/n...
— FancyNance(Formerly Nance on X) (@fancynance.bsky.social) 2025-05-06T23:18:29.775Z
https://www.msnbc.com/deadline-white-house/deadline-legal-blog/trump-alien-enemies-act-memo-deportations-rcna205112
Last week, a Donald Trump-appointed judge in Texas deemed the presidents invocation of the Alien Enemies Act unlawful. Blocking further deportations of alleged Venezuelan gang members under that law, U.S. District Judge Fernando Rodriguez Jr. said the invocation didnt meet the legal standard demanded by the 1798 wartime law.
In doing so, Rodriguez emphasized that he wasnt delving into Trumps factual assertions underlying his invocation, including the claim that the Venezuelan government directs the gang Tren de Araguas actions. Even if those claims were true, the judge found, the government still didnt meet the legal standard, because the alleged conduct didnt qualify as an invasion or predatory incursion under the law.
But a newly declassified memo undercuts that factual claim, too, leaving both the legal and factual basis of Trumps invocation wanting.
The New York Times reported that the memo, released Monday, confirms that U.S. intelligence agencies rejected a key claim President Trump put forth to justify invoking a wartime statute to summarily deport Venezuelans to a prison in El Salvador. The Times reported that the memo states that spy agencies do not believe that the administration of Venezuelas president, Nicolás Maduro, controls a criminal gang, Tren de Aragua. That determination contradicts what Mr. Trump asserted when he invoked the deportation law, the Alien Enemies Act.
This latest news comes as another judge, in New York, ruled against Trumps invocation on Tuesday. Meanwhile, lawyers for people already sent to that Salvadoran prison are seeking their return in a case out of Washington, D.C., while the Supreme Court could weigh in at any time in yet another case on the subject (a different one from Texas).
Ultimately, the justices could need to resolve the underlying legality of Trumps invocation once and for all. The overall case against it is mounting.
I remain shocked that any competent lawyer would file a petition defending the use of the Alien Enemies Act. The use of this law does not pass the blush test. The judges who have ruled against this law did so based on the fact that it is clear that this law does not apply. Now it turns out that the Federal government knew that the factual claims made with respect to this law were false.
I am hoping that there will be some attorneys who will at least be sanctioned due to the use of this law.