Norms Impact
Judge blocks Trump from using 18th-century wartime act for deportations
A president reached for wartime deportation powers in peacetime—seeking removals without hearings—forcing the courts to defend the boundary between emergency authority and ordinary law.
Mar 15, 2025
⚖ Legal Exposure
Sources
Summary
A federal judge temporarily blocked the Trump administration from deporting five Venezuelan nationals under the Alien Enemies Act of 1798. The move tests the boundary between wartime emergency powers and peacetime immigration enforcement by using a centuries-old statute to bypass ordinary legal process. If allowed to stand, it would permit rapid removals without hearings or asylum interviews, shifting deportations into a wartime-authority framework.
Reality Check
Emergency-power shortcuts like this weaken our rights by normalizing removals without due process, turning a wartime tool into a peacetime deportation pipeline. The core legal threat is the attempted end-run around immigration-law procedures and judicial review, using an “invasion” framing to justify detention and deportation under the Alien Enemies Act rather than ordinary process. The conduct is not clearly criminal on these facts, but it squarely implicates the constitutional separation of powers—Congress’s war powers and the judiciary’s role in preventing executive action that strips liberty without hearings. If this model holds, our baseline protections become conditional, revocable by proclamation.
Legal Summary
Exposure is driven by alleged misuse of a wartime statute in peacetime to accelerate deportations and bypass immigration-law procedures, prompting a federal TRO. This is best characterized as high-risk procedural/authority overreach (APA/due process/ultra vires) rather than a money-access quid-pro-quo corruption pattern. Criminal exposure is not established on the facts provided, but civil illegality and constitutional violations are plausible pending merits findings.
Legal Analysis
<h3>50 U.S.C. § 21 (Alien Enemies Act) — Wartime detention/removal authority</h3><ul><li>Allegation: the President invoked the Alien Enemies Act to deport five Venezuelan nationals during peacetime; plaintiffs argue the U.S. is not at war with Venezuela and there is no “invasion or predatory incursion” by Venezuela as a state.</li><li>Structural legal risk: using a wartime statute to bypass ordinary immigration-law procedures (court hearing/asylum interview) can be framed as ultra vires executive action and an unlawful deprivation of statutory process if the predicate conditions are absent.</li></ul><h3>5 U.S.C. § 706(2) (APA) — Agency action “not in accordance with law” / “in excess of statutory jurisdiction”</h3><ul><li>Allegation: the proclamation and resulting removals would “sidestep immigration law” and permit immediate deportations “without any review,” supporting claims of action exceeding lawful authority and arbitrary implementation.</li><li>Litigation posture: a federal judge issued a temporary restraining order to preserve the status quo, indicating credible claims of illegality sufficient for emergency relief (though not a final merits finding).</li></ul><h3>U.S. Const. amend. V (Due Process) — Removal without meaningful process</h3><ul><li>Allegation: affected noncitizens could be put on planes “without any review” of whether they meet the proclamation’s criteria, raising due process concerns over lack of individualized adjudication.</li><li>Key gap for criminal exposure: the article describes contested legal authority and procedural bypass, not bribery, personal enrichment, or other classic criminal predicate.</li></ul><b>Conclusion:</b> The described conduct presents a serious investigative red flag of potential ultra vires and due-process/APA violations (procedural/authority abuse), but the article does not allege a transactional corruption scheme or clear criminal elements beyond contested statutory authority.
Detail
<p>On Saturday, the White House issued a presidential proclamation invoking the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 to deport five Venezuelan nationals. The proclamation targeted alleged Venezuelan members of Tren de Aragua, describing the group as a designated Foreign Terrorist Organization whose members have “unlawfully infiltrated the United States” and are conducting “irregular warfare” and “hostile actions.”</p><p>Hours later, US district judge James Boasberg of the federal district court in Washington DC issued a temporary restraining order barring the administration from using the act to deport the five Venezuelans for 14 days, writing that an immediate order was warranted to maintain the status quo pending a hearing.</p><p>The order followed a same-day lawsuit filed by the ACLU and Democracy Forward alleging unlawful invocation of the statute during peacetime. They argued the act has been used only in the war of 1812 and the first and second world wars, and warned the proclamation would allow removals “without any review” of whether individuals qualify as “alien enemies.”</p>