Chief Justice's Plan To Give Presidents A Little Rendition As A Treat Explodes On Impact At Trial Court
Who could have seen THIS coming?
By Liz Dye on April 11, 2025 2:42 pm
Yesterday, the Supreme Court did the bare minimum to force the Trump administration to follow the law. More than three weeks after a man was illegally renditioned to a Salvadoran gulag, the justices ordered the government to start thinking about getting him back. At some point. If its not too much trouble.
Slow fucking clap.
Kilmar Abrego Garcia, 29, came to the United States when he was 16. He was granted an order withholding removal to his native El Salvador after convincing an immigration judge in 2019 that he was likely to be killed by the MS-13 gang. Nevertheless, he was deported to El Salvador on March 15, based on the governments claim that he is himself a member of MS-13. The Justice Department presented zero evidence in court to back up this claim, although White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt pinky promises that shes seen the proof. Instead, when the mans American wife sued in federal court in Maryland, it sneered that renditioning a person, even in violation of court order, put him beyond the jurisdiction of American courts.
On Friday April 4, Judge Paula Xinis ordered the government to get Abrego Garcia back by midnight Monday. The Fourth Circuit told the DOJ to get bent, but hours before the deadline, the Supreme Court swept in and administratively stayed Judge Xiniss edict.
Finally, last night the majority issued an unsigned, three-paragraph opinion, upholding Judge Xiniss order minus the deadline with a caution that the trial court should clarify its directive, with due regard for the deference owed to the Executive Branch in the conduct of foreign affairs. The Court mumbled some nonsense (cribbed from Judge Wilkinsons concurrence below) about differentiating between effectuating and facilitating the return of a man everyone agrees was illegally deported, and instructed the government to be prepared to share what it can concerning the steps it has taken and the prospect of further steps.
If Chief Justice Roberts aimed to avoid a crisis where the government stands in open defiance of a federal judge, he managed to hold it off for less than 24 hours.
More:
https://abovethelaw.com/2025/04/chief-justices-plan-to-give-presidents-a-little-rendition-as-a-treat-explodes-on-impact-at-trial-court/