Pickering Angels

update - another Fed judge strikes down Trump sanctions against Dem law firm

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
80,806
106,634
113
'Unlawful many times over': Judge issues 'big win for Harvard' in Trump lawsuit

A federal judge blocked the Trump administration from revoking Harvard University's ability to enroll foreign students, calling the order a "blatant violation" of the U.S. Constitution.

Harvard filed a complaint Friday morning in Boston federal court, and U.S. District judge Allison Burroughs issued a temporary restraining order hours later freezing the policy.


"Revoking Harvard’s certification is unlawful many times over," the judge wrote in her order. "It is a pillar of our constitutional system that the government cannot 'invok[e] legal sanctions and other means of coercion' to police private speech, especially when the government’s treatment is animated by viewpoint discrimination. The government’s effort to punish the University for its refusal to surrender its academic independence and for its perceived viewpoint is a patent violation of the First Amendment."

Want more breaking political news? Click for the latest headlines at Raw Story.

EXCLUSIVE: Trump accused of new grift that puts Qatari plane in shade


White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson dismissed Harvard's lawsuit as "frivolous."

"If only Harvard cared this much about ending the scourge of anti-American, anti-Semitic, pro-terrorist agitators on their campus they wouldn't be in this situation to begin with," Jackson said. "Harvard should spend their time and resources on creating a safe campus environment instead of filing frivolous lawsuits."


CNN's Elie Honig said the temporary restraining order was a significant win for the university.

"It is a big win for Harvard, temporary but very significant," Honig said. "What this says is the court is blocking the Trump administration from blocking Harvard from bringing in international students. In other words, as of this moment, it's back to the status quo. Harvard may continue to bring in international students."
 
  • Like
Reactions: Gators

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
80,806
106,634
113
Judge throws Trump lawyers' own words back in their faces in angry slap down

A federal judge angrily rejected the Trump administration's request to reverse his order to give due process to migrants deported to South Sudan.

In a scathing 17-page order, U.S. District Judge Brian Murphy threw the administration's lawyers' words back into their faces to show they had argued in bad faith that meaningful immigration proceedings could be conducted overseas, and found the administration had violated his preliminary injunction.


"Since that hearing, merely five days ago, Defendants have changed their tune," Murphy wrote. "It turns out that having immigration proceedings on another continent is harder and more logistically cumbersome than Defendants anticipated."

Want more breaking political news? Click for the latest headlines at Raw Story.

The Trump administration flew immigrants to war-ravaged South Sudan earlier this month despite a court order requiring ICE to give people being deported to a country that's not their own a chance to argue their concerns in court. Trump administration lawyers claimed that could be done after arrival in the countries.

Murphy made clear the deportees should be given adequate notice and opportunity to raise fears of persecution or torture before they were taken to third countries, and he said the administration had raised red herrings to avoid complying with his order.

EXCLUSIVE: Trump accused of new grift that puts Qatari plane in shade

"However, the Court never said that Defendants had to convert their foreign military base into an immigration facility; it only left that as an option, again, at Defendants’ request," Murphy wrote. "The other option, of course, has always been to simply return to the status quo of roughly one week ago, or else choose any other location to complete the required process."

Only one of the eight deportees, who are currently being held in Djibouti, is a South Sudanese national. Another was expected to be returned to Myanmar.

"Defendants have mischaracterized this Court’s order, while at the same time manufacturing the very chaos they decry," Murphy wrote. "By racing to get six class members onto a plane to unstable South Sudan, clearly in breach of the law and this Court’s order, Defendants gave this Court no choice but to find that they were in violation of the Preliminary Injunction."
 
Toronto Escorts