Friday, April 18, 2025

Sen. Chris Van Hollen meets with Abrego Garcia in El Salvador as that country's president shows no sign of returning a man the U.S. admits was wrongly deported

 
Sen. Chris Van Hollen (right) meets with Kilmar Abrego Garcia

 

A U.S. Senator met yesterday with the Maryland man who was wrongly deported to El Salvador. Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) posted a photo on X of his meeting with Kilmar Abrego Garcia. Van Hollen said he will release more information about the visit when he returns to the United States. The latest updates on Van Hollen's efforts to gain Abrego Garcia's release from El Salvador's famously inhumane CECOT prison come from an article jointly published at Reuters and Yahoo! News under the headline "U.S. Senator Van Hollen meets wrongly deported man in El Salvador." Daniel Trotta and Kaniska Singh report:

Democratic U.S. Senator Chris Van Hollen met on Thursday with Kilmar Abrego Garcia, the man wrongly deported to El Salvador in a case that has pitted a defiant Trump administration against the courts and fanned the prospect of a constitutional conflict.

The senator posted on X an image of himself in El Salvador with Abrego Garcia, dressed in a collared shirt, jeans and a baseball cap, a day after being denied access to the notorious prison for gang members where he has been held.

"I said my main goal of this trip (to El Salvador) was to meet with Kilmar. Tonight I had that chance," the senator wrote in his post, but giving no indication of Abrego Garcia's health or state of mind.

"I have called his wife, Jennifer, to pass along his message of love," Van Hollen added. "I look forward to providing a full update upon my return."

The U.S. Supreme Court has directed the administration of President Donald Trump to facilitate Abrego Garcia's return after Washington acknowledged he was deported because of an administrative error.

Speaking of the U.S. Supreme Court, Van Hollen's visit drew the attention of an outspoken justice on the court. It also prompted lawyers for Abrego Garcia to deny allegations that he belongs to a criminal gang -- although that did not keep the White House from repeating the accusation, which appears to have no evidentiary basis. Trotta and Singh write:

In a statement apart from the ruling, liberal Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor said the government had cited no basis for what she called Abrego Garcia's "warrantless arrest," nor for his deportation or imprisonment in El Salvador.

Abrego Garcia's lawyers say he has never been charged with, nor convicted of, any crime, and deny the Justice Department's accusation that he belongs to the criminal gang MS-13.

But the government has given no indication it plans to seek his return and said it had no authority to release a man from a foreign prison, raising the potential for a constitutional conflict should Trump defy the highest court.

In a statement after the meeting, White House Deputy Press Secretary Kush Desai repeated the unproven accusation that Abrego Garcia was a member of MS-13.

"Chris Van Hollen has firmly established Democrats as the party whose top priority is the welfare of an illegal alien MS-13 terrorist," Desai said.

Another Trump official seemed to be irritated by the Van Hollen visit:

Trump's border czar, Tom Homan, told CNN the man belonged in prison, despite the Supreme Court directive.

"He's a citizen of El Salvador and he's in El Salvador. He's home," Homan said.

"I think we did the right thing, I think he is where he should be. Even if he came back ... he's going to be detained and he's going to be removed as per the order of removal."

Along with Abrego Garcia, the Trump administration has deported to El Salvador hundreds of people, mostly Venezuelans, whom it says are gang members, under the Alien Enemies Act of 1798, without presenting evidence and without a trial.

A U.S. district judge, James Boasberg, has already threatened administration officials with criminal contempt charges over the deportations.

Boasberg said the administration demonstrated "willful disregard" for his March 15 order, barring the deportations to El Salvador under the 1798 act.

Salvadoran officials have also shown no interest in releasing Abrego Garcia.

During a meeting with Trump at the White House on Monday, El Salvador's president, Nayib Bukele, said he had no plans to return Abrego Garcia.

Bukele also posted pictures of the encounter with Van Hollen on social media, followed by a post saying he would remain in the custody of the Central American country.

"Now that he's been confirmed healthy, he gets the honor of staying in El Salvador's custody," Bukele said.

Van Hollen, the U.S. senator from Maryland, where Abrego Garcia lived, arrived on Wednesday in El Salvador to meet senior officials and advocate for his release, but was told by Vice President Felix Ulloa he could not authorize a visit or a telephone call with Abrego Garcia.

It was not immediately clear what changed to allow the senator's access.

Abrego Garcia, 29, left El Salvador at age 16 to escape gang-related violence, his lawyers said, and received a protective order in 2019 to continue living in the United States.

Thursday, April 17, 2025

For the second time in two days, Trump admin becomes the subject of a federal judge's contempt inquiry -- again driven by lack of due process

Judge James Boasberg (NY Times)
 

For the second time in two days, a federal judge has announced plans to begin a contempt inquiry into the Donald Trump administration's defiance of court orders. Both judges acted on deportation cases. The most recent such action came yesterday when James Boasberg, chief U.S. district judge for the District of Columbia, stated in court documents that he found sufficient grounds to hold the government in contempt.

The news comes with irony, given that Trump is a convicted felon and adjudicated rapist -- with his status in both cases having been widely reported long before the 2024 presidential election last winter. That race ended with Trump defeating Democratic contender Kamala Harris, allowing him to return to the White House for a second term after serving from 2017-2021. Less than three months into his second term, Trump finds himself involved in a case that could involve criminal contempt.

That is the Boasberg matter, where the contempt issue came to light one day after U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis announced in Greenbelt, MD, that she was beginning an inquiry into the Trump administration's defiance of her orders in the deportation to El Salvador of Maryland resident Kilmar Abrego Garcia. Xinis has scheduled two weeks of discovery in the case and appears to be considering both criminal and civil contempt.

Details on the contempt issue come from a jointly published article at AFP.com and Yahoo! News under the headline "US judge says 'probable cause' to hold Trump admin in contempt." Susan Stumme writes:

A US judge said Wednesday he had found "probable cause" to hold President Donald Trump's administration in contempt in a deportation case, raising the stakes in the White House's confrontation with the justice system.

The White House said it planned an "immediate" appeal to the decision by District Judge James Boasberg, who had ordered the government to halt flights of more than 200 alleged gang Venezuelan members to El Salvador.

Boasberg issued a temporary restraining order on March 15 to halt the deportations, which were carried out under an obscure wartime law, the 1798 Alien Enemies Act, which strips away the usual legal due process.

Boasberg stated that signs of probable contempt were "obvious" from examination of the case record. Stumme writes:

In a written opinion, the judge cited evidence that the government had engaged in "deliberate or reckless disregard" of his order when it proceeded with the flights.

"Defendants provide no convincing reason to avoid the conclusion that appears obvious... that they deliberately flouted this Court's written Order and, separately, its oral command that explicitly delineated what compliance entailed," he wrote.

The administration's actions were "sufficient for the court to conclude that probable cause exists to find the government in criminal contempt," Boasberg wrote.

The judge said the government would be offered a final chance to "purge such contempt" or face further court action.

Trump's dissatisfaction and anger with judges has been apparent for months, and the administration apparently is prepared to continue with a defiant stance, Stumme reports:

Since his return to the White House in January, Trump has flirted with open defiance of the judiciary following setbacks to his right-wing agenda, with deportation cases taking center stage.

"We plan to seek immediate appellate relief," White House Communications Director Steven Cheung said in a statement after the judge's ruling.

"The President is 100 percent committed to ensuring that terrorists and criminal illegal migrants are no longer a threat to Americans and their communities across the country."

As with the case before Judge Xinis, Boasberg has voiced concerns about the administration's history of detaining and deporting residents without due process -- in the form of a court hearing, with the protections such a proceeding provides. For the moment, Team Trump does not seem to be concerned that the law requires due process before a  deportation is executed. But Boasberg seems serious about making sure the administration takes such issues into consideration. From the AFP/Yahoo! report:

In invoking the Alien Enemies Act -- which had only been used previously during the War of 1812, World War I and World War II -- Trump said he was targeting transnational gangs he had declared foreign terrorist organizations.

That included the Venezuelan group Tren de Aragua, but lawyers for several of the deported Venezuelans have said that their clients were not gang members, had committed no crimes and were targeted largely on the basis of their tattoos.

Trump has routinely criticized rulings that curb his policies and power, and attacked the judges who issued them, including Boasberg.

The Republican president said Wednesday that US courts are "totally out of control," writing on his Truth Social platform: "They seem to hate 'TRUMP' so much, that anything goes!"

His administration is also under fire over its admission that Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who was living in the eastern state of Maryland and married to a US citizen, was deported to a notorious prison in El Salvador due to an "administrative error."

Wednesday, April 16, 2025

Faced with a backlash on the Abrego Garcia case, Trump admin assigns Karoline Leavitt to make it better by asking, "Who needs due process anyway?"

Karoline Leavitt (whitehouse.gov)

The White House called a press briefing yesterday in response to backlash prompted by Donald Trump's inflammatory statements in a Monday Oval Office session regarding the Kilmar Abrego Garcia deportation to El Salvador. Unfortunately, the administration could not get its facts straight, likely leaving the press and the public shaking their collective heads. 

One problem came when Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt was assigned to address issues related to the controversy at hand -- and she proved to be not up to the task. Leavitt was so clueless about the subject matter that . . . well, the briefing joined a growing list of embarrassing moments that have plagued Trump White House 2.0.

How bad was it? The Hill provides the basics from reporter Brett Samuels, under the headline "White House: Abrego Garcia deportation to El Salvador ‘always going to be end result'."

We will use Samuels' story to show how Leavitt ran off the tracks. Then we will turn to the words of someone who actually knows what she's talking about -- University of Baltimore Law Professor Kim Wehle, who was quoted extensively in an NPR piece titled "The risk Kilmar Abrego Garcia's case poses for citizens, according to legal scholar. That is an alarming headline, and it shows that -- even in an era of numerous troubling legal cases -- the Abrego Garcia matter is particularly gross. In fact, one legal expert refers to Trump's actions and statements related to the case as an "abomination."

We will use The Hill and NPR articles to help clear up the muddy waters that Trump and Leavitt created. Our hope is that we provide some clarity so the public can better understand a profoundly important and complex court case, one that is international in scope. (Note: We even will use "oopsie," a word that El Salvador President Hayib Bekule introduced to the fray.)

Let's start with Brett Samuels' account of the Karoline Leavitt press briefing:

The White House asserted Tuesday there was no scenario in which a Maryland man whose deportation to El Salvador has made national headlines and spurred court battles would end up living a “peaceful life” back in the United States. 

Press secretary Karoline Leavitt expressed exasperation over media coverage of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a Salvadoran national whom administration officials acknowledged in a court filing they mistakenly deported. Officials have since changed their tune on that matter, and the lawyer who wrote of the “administrative error” has since been put on leave.

(a) Leavitt goes "oopsie" -- Like others in the Trump administration, Leavitt does not seem to understand that the Abrego Garcia case involves a fairly important concept in our legal system; it is called "due process of law." It is a constitutional right, and Garcia was mercilessly deprived of it in what has amounted to a state-sanctioned kidnapping.

(b)  Kim Wehle explains via NPR --

The ongoing legal saga of a wrongly deported immigrant from El Salvador creates a situation where President Trump can deny due process to anyone — not just immigrants living in the U.S. without legal status — if he removes them from the country, warns a constitutional scholar.

The case is now "about whether [Trump] feels like giving someone their rights or shipping them to a foreign country," University of Baltimore School of Law professor Kim Wehle told Morning Edition.

Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a Salvadoran immigrant who was granted protection from deportation by a judge in 2019, was arrested and deported in March. He entered the U.S. without status and lived in Maryland for almost 15 years. Abrego Garcia had no criminal record, and the Trump administration admitted his removal was due to an "administrative error."

Judge Paula Xinis flashes anger at Trump team's defiance of her orders in Abrego Garcia case, but she will consider contempt issue after 2 weeks of discovery

(YouTube)

 

A federal judge yesterday ripped into Trump administration officials for their inaction in the Abrego Garcia deportation case involving El Salvador and its president, Hayib Bukele. During a hearing in Greenbelt, MD, U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis made little attempt to hide her anger at brazen defiance of her orders from the White House. Still, Xinis did not announce a ruling on possible contempt of court and scheduled two weeks of discovery before publicly addressing that issue -- and others.

In an article at thehill.com -- under the headline "Judge orders Trump officials’ depositions, blasts inaction in Abrego Garcia case" -- Zach Schonfeld and Rebecca Beitsch report:

A federal judge Tuesday ordered depositions from several Trump officials, blasting the administration for failing to take any steps to secure the return of a Maryland man wrongly deported to a Salvadoran prison.

During a hearing, U.S. District Court Judge Paula Xinis repeatedly clashed with Drew Ensign, an attorney with the Justice Department, as the judge contended the government had flouted her orders demanding updates on efforts to facilitate Kilmar Abrego Garcia’s return.

“What the record shows is that nothing has been done. Nothing. I asked for reports from individuals with direct knowledge and I’ve gotten very little information of any value,” the judge said, noting that she gave “a very simple directive” for updates on steps the government had taken.

Xinis, an Obama appointee, said she was holding off at this juncture on deciding whether the government should be held in contempt but would still rule down the road. 

For now, the judge ordered the administration to respond to interrogatories and document production requests. She also ordered the four government officials who signed affidavits in the case to sit for depositions by April 23, giving Abrego Garcia’s lawyers a chance to question key immigration officials in the administration.

Xinis seemed to almost suppress a guffaw when a Trump lawyer suggested he would appeal her ruling. In fact, the judge and the lawyer, Drew Ensign, tangled on a number of issues throughout the hearing -- perhaps because Ensign had the unenviable task of presenting the administration's dubious arguments -some of which bordered on the absurd:

Ensign signaled the administration may assert legal privileges to avoid at least one of the depositions. He also suggested the government may appeal Xinis’s order, saying “we don't believe discovery is appropriate.”

“You lost. This is now about the scope of the remedy,” Xinis said, adding that there is nothing to appeal.

Abrego Garcia was protected under a 2019 immigration court ruling from being deported to El Salvador, and the Trump administration has acknowledged mistakenly deporting him there last month. Citing an informant, the administration accuses the man of being a part of MS-13, but Abrego Garcia’s family contests any gang ties.

The hearing was largely focused on whether the Trump administration had complied with a Supreme Court ruling that largely upheld an earlier order from Xinis, saying the administration must “facilitate” his return from CECOT, a notorious prison in El Salvador known by its acronym in Spanish.

Ensign said Xinis should consider the term in the narrower sense used in immigration law, suggesting the U.S. could only help the imprisoned man if he were able to escape CECOT and present himself before U.S. officials.

The Trump administration had also argued that they are unable to push a foreign country to release someone in their custody — though the U.S. has paid El Salvador $6 million to imprison Abrego Garcia and more than 200 other men at CECOT.

“If he appears at a port of entry or U.S. Embassy we will facilitate his return,” Ensign said.

Xinis responded that the argument “flies in the face of the plain meaning of the word.”

“The bottom line is it was a very simple directive. My question, that the high court squarely affirmed I can ask, is what have you done? I’ve gotten nothing. I’ve gotten no real response, nor have I gotten any legitimate reason.”

Ticking off a judge generally is not considered a wise courtroom strategy, but once Ensign got started, he could not seem to stop himself. In all fairness, it long has been public knowledge that serving as a lawyer on Donald Trump's behalf is a thankless task:

Ensign also pointed to an Oval Office meeting between President Trump and Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele in which the Central American leader said he would not return Abrego Garcia.

Xinis said she did not understand why the Justice Department submitted a transcript of the meeting, as it did not answer her question about what efforts were being undertaken. A portion of the meeting was on camera, in front of reporters.

“No press release is going to move the court,” she said.

Xinis suggested a fast pace for the depositions and review of discovery — something that would ultimately put her on a path to determining whether to hold anyone from the Trump administration in contempt.

“We’re going to move. There will be no tolerance for gamesmanship and grandstanding,” she said.

“There are no business hours while we do this — there are going to be two intense weeks of discovery,” she added later.

“Cancel vacation, cancel other appointments. I’m usually pretty good about that in my courtroom, but not this time. It won’t be a convenience issue.”

The hearing fell exactly one month since Abrego Garcia was put on a flight to El Salvador, and his family has not been able to reach him since.

Jennifer Vasquez Sura, Abrego Garcia’s wife, addressed his absence ahead of the hearing, noting how much he was missed by the couple’s three children.

“You should have been here leading our Easter prayers. Instead I find myself pleading the with Trump administration and the Bukele administration: Stop playing political games with the life of Kilmar. Our family is torn apart during this scary time and our children miss their dad so much.”

Tuesday, April 15, 2025

El Salvador's Nayib Bukele becomes the latest object of Trump's adoration for "strongmen," playing to the U.S. president's twisted taste for violence and lawlessness

Bukele and Trump: Two thugs who deserve each other.

Donald Trump long has expressed admiration for authoritarian leaders. After an Oval Office visit yesterday from a relative unknown on the world stage, we will have to make room for another strongman ruler. How did Trump become smitten this time? We learn the details in a jointly published article at Politico and Yahoo! News under the headline "Trump, in a rare move, deferred to another world leader. It’s a clear legal play; El Salvador President Nayib Bukele is urging Trump to emulate his iron-fisted playbook." The reporting triumvirate of Kyle Cheney, Josh Gerstein and Hassan Ali Kanu explains:

Move over Kim Jong Un, Vladimir Putin and Viktor Orban. Donald Trump’s latest strongman bromance is with “President B.”

Though Trump has long admired foreign authoritarians, El Salvador President Nayib Bukele’s repressive regime is in some ways the beta test for Trump 2.0. Bukele calls himself the “world’s coolest dictator.” Trump said he would be a dictator on Day 1. And Trump has floated or deployed many of the same tactics Bukele used to consolidate power: removing judges, intimidating political adversaries, bypassing due process and evading term limits.

Now, Bukele is actively helping Trump sidestep court orders in the United States.

During a White House visit Monday in which the two leaders bantered like old friends, Bukele insisted on one thing: He will not release Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a native Salvadoran who was living in Maryland until the U.S. illegally deported him last month. The upshot of that declaration: It gives Trump cover to maintain that he is powerless to implement a judge’s directive that the U.S. “facilitate” Abrego Garcia’s immediate return from a brutal El Salvador prison. The Supreme Court upheld that directive last week.

In short, Bukele is helping Trump break the law by defying a court order. Is that the kind of company a U.S. president should be keeping? The answer is no. But given Trump's shaky judgment -- the kind that led him to be a convicted felon and adjudicated rapist -- we probably should not be surprised that he would cozy up to a glorified thug such as Bukele? Is our assessment too harsh? Consider the following from a 2024 Associated Press report:

The human rights organization Cristosal says that at least 261 people have died in prisons in El Salvador during President Nayib Bukele’s 2 1/2-year-old crackdown on street gangs.

Under a state of emergency originally declared in 2022 and still in effect, Bukele’s government has rounded up 81,110 suspected gang members in sweeps that rights groups say are often arbitrary, based on a person’s appearance or where they live. The government has had to release about 7,000 people because of a lack of evidence.

The group said in a report that, as of April 15, 88 of the 261 deaths “may have been the result of a criminal act,” though it did not specify what those acts may have been.

The report said 87 of the deaths were due to illnesses, 14 were apparently “acts of violence” and no cause could be immediately identified for the other 72.

Building a society on democratic principles does not appear to be a high priority for Bukele. Trump is not big on democratic principles either, so it's little wonder the two leaders get along famously. Yesterday's meeting was driven by what amounts to a state-sanctioned kidnapping . . . by the United States. And Trump showed no signs of being concerned about it. The Politico reporting team described the administration's tactics as "summary deportations," where due process plays little, if any, role. The Cheney/Gerstein/Kanu team writes:

Trump’s “nothing I can do here” stance is unusual for a president who prides himself on strong-arming other world leaders to do his bidding. And it escalates a clash with the courts in advance of a crucial Tuesday hearing before U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis, who ordered Abrego Garcia’s return and is growing frustrated with the administration’s recalcitrance.

Hours after Bukele’s White House visit, the Trump administration quoted some of his comments in a daily report Xinis has demanded. Also in that document, the acting general counsel at the Department of Homeland Security, Joseph Mazzara, declared that “DHS does not have authority to forcibly extract an alien from the domestic custody of a foreign sovereign nation.” The filing included no information in response to Xinis’ substantive questions.

The burgeoning partnership between Trump and Bukele is not limited to Abrego Garcia. Trump sent hundreds of other deportees to El Salvador last month, many without due process. And on Monday, he intensified his threats of lawless deportations even further: He openly mused about sending U.S. citizens to the Salvadoran prison.

That Trump would even think of sending U.S. citizens to a prison in El Salvador, under Bukele's control, shows how little regard he has for the rule of law. It also suggests Trump is becoming more unhinged and dangerous by the day. From Politico/Yahoo!:

“Sending U.S. citizens to another country’s prison that has significant human rights concerns and does not meet our constitutional standards for conditions is illegal,” said Lauren-Brooke Eisen, senior director of the Justice Program at the Brennan Center for Justice. “It would also violate the First Step Act, which President Trump signed in 2018 and mandates that the federal government place people in ‘a facility as close as practicable to the prisoner’s primary residence, and to the extent practicable, in a facility within 500 driving miles of that residence.’”

Pushing legal limits

Even without casting out U.S. citizens, Trump has tested the boundaries of his legal authority to deport foreign nationals without due process. He has invoked the Alien Enemies Act of 1798, a rarely used wartime power, to send hundreds of Venezuelan nationals and other foreign citizens he’s deemed terrorists or gang members into the open arms of Bukele’s government. Salvadoran officials quickly — with cameras rolling — shackled, shaved and shuttled them into the massive detention facility known as the Terrorism Confinement Center.

Trump’s summary deportations, however, appear to have been riddled with errors that have raised alarms about whether the administration is sending the wrong people to potentially indefinite imprisonment in brutal conditions outside the protections of the U.S. Constitution. The Justice Department has already acknowledged in court that Abrego Garcia was deported in violation of a 2019 immigration judge’s order that found he could not be sent there due to potential persecution by a local gang. Trump immigration and Justice Department officials, including Solicitor General John Sauer, have repeatedly called the deportation an “administrative error.”

But top White House adviser Stephen Miller contradicted that admission Monday.

“He was not mistakenly sent to El Salvador,” Miller said on Fox News, adding: “This was the right person sent to the right place.”

Amid the conflicting statements from the Trump administration, Bukele muddied the waters further Monday by disclaiming that even he lacks the power to return wrongly deported people currently held in his country.

“How can I smuggle a terrorist into the United States?” Bukele asked about Abrego Garcia. “I don’t have the power to return him to the United States.”

The implication of the leaders’ rhetoric is a remarkable catch-22: Both the American and Salvadoran governments are asserting they have no authority to fix what multiple judges have found to be a grievous error.

Xinis, an Obama appointee to the federal bench in Maryland, is one of those judges. What happened to Abrego Garcia, she wrote, “shocks the conscience.” She has scheduled another hearing for Tuesday afternoon as lawyers for Abrego Garcia urge her to hold Trump administration officials in contempt for defying her orders.

Before the press was allowed into the Oval Office yesterday, the two presidents had a mostly private discussion that revealed a lot about both of them -- and it wasn't pretty. Cheney/Gerstein/Kanu write:

Trump sees value in violent videos

Trump offered various reasons Monday for embracing El Salvador’s prisons, including that doing so could save the U.S. money and that they appear to be more secure than U.S. facilities. But it was evident that what he most appreciates about Bukele’s approach is the imagery of prisoners being roughly handled by guards, having their heads shaved and being forced into massive group cells.

Speaking in quiet tones to Bukele before the press corps was ushered in, Trump raised the issue of sending Americans there.

“The homegrowns are next,” Trump could be heard saying on a live video feed sent out by Bukele’s office. “You got to build about five more places.”

“Yeah, we’ve got space,” Bukele replied, drawing scattered laughter from U.S. officials in the room.

Trump then gushed over the slickly edited, Hollywood-style videos Bukele’s operation has cranked out for each batch of prisoners the U.S. has dispatched there in recent weeks.

“I’ll tell you who’s good: whoever sends us those tapes that you get. They become sensations in this country,” Trump said. “Getting out of those planes, that’s what people want to see: Respect, they want to see respect. … Whoever does that does a great job.”

Trump even compared the videos to the epic films of Cecil B. DeMille.

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, who traveled to the Salvadoran prison and recorded a social-media video in front of one of the group cells, also highlighted the propaganda value.

“It’s been a powerful message of consequences,” she said. “This is a clear consequence for the worst of the worst.”

Bukele’s bombast

Bukele, for his part, has deftly associated himself with the key figures in Trump’s MAGA orbit to solidify his credibility with the president. On X, he regularly interacts with and reposts Elon Musk, former congressman Matt Gaetz, and right-leaning journalists who have posted favorably about the deportation efforts.

And Bukele has used social media to revel in helping Trump circumvent orders from U.S. courts. When a judge ordered planes carrying Venezuelan deportees last month to either turn around or bring those prisoners back to the U.S., Bukele responded on Twitter: “Oopsie…too late,” followed by a tears of joy emoji.

Bukele publicly floated the idea of taking in American-citizen prisoners in February, writing on X that his country was prepared to help the U.S. “outsource part of its prison system … in exchange for a fee.”

“The fee would be relatively low for the U.S. but significant for us, making our entire prison system sustainable,” he said.

While violent crime in the U.S. is at or near record lows, Bukele portrayed the country as besieged by criminals and was explicit Monday that the U.S. should emulate the approach of El Salvador, which now has the highest per capita incarceration rate in the world.

“You have 350 million people to liberate. To liberate 350 million people, you have to imprison some,” Bukele said. “We’re very eager to help. … We know that you have a crime problem, a terrorism problem that you need help with. And we’re a small country but, if we can help, we will do it.”

Monday, April 14, 2025

Marjorie Taylor Greene, often the center of attention, draws unwanted scrutiny for curious stock trades during market volatility driven by Trump's tariffs

Marjorie Taylor Greene: Curious stock trades draw heat (Getty)

Democrats are calling for scrutiny of Marjorie Taylor Greene's financial trading last week during stock-market volatility driven by President Donald Trump's "roller-coaster" actions on tariffs. Greene, a conservative U.S. representative from Georgia and an outspoken Trump ally, took actions during the market uncertainty that some Democrats consider suspicious, according to a report at Newsweek.  Under the headline "Marjorie Taylor Greene Faces 'Insider Trading' Probe Calls Over Stock Buys," Hugh Cameron writes:

Democrats are calling for an investigation into Marjorie Taylor Greene's purchase of stocks during the recent market dip following President Donald Trump's announcement of sweeping global tariffs on April 2.

On Thursday, Texas Democratic Representative Gregorio Casar said: "We need an investigation into insider trading by people like Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene. We need an investigation into whether any K Street lobbyists or other big firms were tipped off by Donald Trump's actions."

When contacted for comment, a representative of Greene called the implication that a probe would be launched into the matter "utterly absurd."

Why It Matters

Markets plummeted after Trump announced his "liberation day" reciprocal tariffs on most American trading partners on April 2.

However, he subsequently announced a 90-day pause on the tariffs on Wednesday, April 9, saying that "people were getting a bit yippy." The move sent the markets soaring.

While members of Congress are permitted to buy and sell stocks, their knowledge of political developments has often raised concerns about the possibility of insider trading.

What To Know

Greene has disclosed purchasing a number of stocks in the days leading up to the 90-day pause—seven on April 3 and 19 on April 4—according to the Congressional trade tracker Insiderfinance.io. These included purchases ranging from $1,001 to $15,000 of shares in Lululemon, Dell Technologies and Apple Inc, among others.

Although lawmakers are allowed to buy and sell stocks, they are required by the Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge Act to publicly disclose any stock trades valued over $1,000 within 45 days of the transaction.

Greene is the only member of Congress so far to disclose trades made after Trump's "Liberation Day" announcement, but the 45-day disclosure rule means many others may have purchased or sold stocks after this date.

Following Trump's speech on April 2, American and global markets were sent plummeting as investors panicked over the potential impact of the new tariffs on businesses worldwide.

Many of the stocks purchased by Greene were among those hit sharply by the announcement. Apple Inc saw its share price fall nearly 8.2 percent between markets opening on April 2 and closing on April 3, the date Greene purchased the stock.

Trump's announcement on Wednesday of a 90-day pause on the reciprocal tariffs — intended to allow countries to approach the U.S. administration and negotiate trade deals— resulted in a historic rally for U.S. equities.

However the rebound was short-lived. On Thursday, the S&P 500 fell by just under 3.5 percent. The Nasdaq Composite also dropped 4.3 percent, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average ended the day down more than 1,000 points (2.5 percent).

Casar's call for an investigation comes after Senator Adam Schiff also announced that Congressional Democrats would be investigating Trump's administration for insider trading prompted by the recent market volatility linked to his changing tariffs.

Senate Dems call for SEC investigation of actions Trump allies and family members might have taken to enrich themselves in the wake of pause on tariffs

Graph shows the story of a stock-market rally (ABC)
 

Senate Democrats are calling for an investigation of possible insider trading related to President Donald Trump's pause on tariffs last week, according to an article at HuffPost. Under the headline "Democrats Call For SEC Insider Trading Probe Into Possible Trump Market Manipulation," Nina Golgowski reports:

Several senior Senate Democrats are asking the Securities and Exchange Commission to investigate whether President Donald Trump and others engaged in insider trading, market manipulation or other securities-law violations related to his volatile global tariffs plans that have upended financial markets.

In a letter sent to SEC Chair Paul Atkins on Friday, Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren and five other senators pointed to Trump’s back-and-forth policy changes creating “significant market turmoil,” amounting to trillions of dollars of lost value, since their unveiling last week.

They also pointed to Trump publicly encouraging people to invest in the stock market just hours before he unexpectedly announced a 90-day pause on most tariffs, which triggered a massive rally Wednesday.

Republicans claimed the pause on tariffs was part of a Trump strategy all along, and they accused Democrats of playing politics over the president's ability to strike back at China on trade policy. Golgowski reports:

A similar investigation request was made by Democratic leaders in a letter sent Wednesday to the Office of Government Ethics acting Director Jamieson Greer and White House chief of staff Susie Wiles.

“This was his strategy all along,” Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told reporters Wednesday of Trump’s surprise decision to walk back tariffs on every country but China. The reversal triggered what Trump and others recognized as one of the best market days in history.  

White House spokesperson Kush Desai accused the Democratic leaders of “playing partisan games” with their SEC request in a statement to HuffPost

“Democrats railed against China’s cheating for decades, and now they’re playing partisan games instead of celebrating President Trump’s decisive action yesterday to finally corner China,” Desai said.

An SEC spokesperson declined comment on the investigation request when reached Friday by HuffPost.

Much still is not known about possible actions D.C. and administration insiders might have taken related to Trump's pause on tariffs. But Democrats argue they already have grounds to support an investigation. Trump family members should be part of any probe, they state. From the HuffPost report: 

In their letter Friday, the Democratic senators said that it’s “unclear which officials and affiliates of President Trump had advance knowledge of his plans to delay tariffs — but insiders may have known that he was going to announce a tariff pause and that the market would improve.”

This is reason enough for an investigation, they said.

“We urge the SEC to investigate whether the tariff announcements, which caused the market crash and subsequent partial recovery, enriched administration insiders and friends at the expense of the American public and whether any insiders, including the President’s family, had prior knowledge of the tariff pause that they abused to make stock trades ahead of the President’s announcement,” the letter reads.

The letter additionally was signed by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, Finance Committee ranking member Ron Wyden, Arizona’s Mark Kelly and Ruben Gallego, and California’s Adam Schiff.

Friday, April 11, 2025

Trump-appointed judge rules admin's blockade of Associated Press is unconstitutional, striking a blow for First Amendment and media access to news events


(RSF)
 
A Trump-appointed federal judge has ruled that the White House ban on the Associated Press (AP) is unconstitutional. The administration can appeal the ruling -- and that almost certainly will happen, given the administration can use your tax dollars and mine to pay for it. But the fact one of Donald Trump's own judges ruled against him -- and the U.S. Supreme Court might be reluctant to spend what's left of its political capital on a case that so clearly violates the First Amendment -- says a lot about the weakness of the Trump case.
 
An article jointly published at Fox News and Yahoo! News -- under the headline "Federal
discrimination'" -- gives the public insight on one of the most clear-cut First 
Amendment cases we are likely to see in our lifetimes. Lindsay Kornick writes:
The White House violated the Constitution for barring the Associated Press from Oval Office events, according to a federal judge’s ruling Tuesday. U.S. District Judge Trevor N. McFadden, a Trump appointee, said that the White House acted against the First Amendment, which prohibits discrimination based on viewpoints, by blocking the longtime wire service's access over its refusal to use the term "Gulf of America."

"The Government offers no other plausible explanation for its treatment of the AP. The Constitution forbids viewpoint discrimination, even in a nonpublic forum like the Oval Office," McFadden wrote. "Under the First Amendment, if the Government opens its doors to some journalists—be it to the Oval Office, the East Room, or elsewhere—it cannot then shut those doors to other journalists because of their viewpoints," he added. "The Constitution requires no less."
 
McFadden ruled the White House must restore AP’s press access but delayed
the order for one week to allow the White House a chance to appeal.

Throughout his first term as president -- and since he returned for a second term in January -- Trump has pulled plenty of stupid and incompetent stunts. But this is a truly embarrassing

episode, indicating Trump is clueless about the First Amendment, to the point that he should

be removed from office, likely via impeachment. Does gross ignorance count as a "high crime or misdemeanor"? We aren't sure about that, but it certainly means Trump has no business being in the White House -- and every American should be ashamed that we somehow allowed him to get back there. How silly is this "dispute"? The Fox/Yahoo! report serves as an explainer:

After President Donald Trump signed an executive order renaming the "Gulf of Mexico" to the "Gulf of America" on his first day in office, the AP issued style guidance for how the wire service would refer to the body of water. "The Gulf of Mexico has carried that name for more than 400 years. The Associated Press will refer to it by its original name while acknowledging the new name Trump has chosen. As a global news agency that disseminates news around the world, the AP must ensure that place names and geography are easily recognizable to all audiences," the guidelines state.

The White House blocked AP from the Oval Office and Air Force One in February over its refusal to use the term "Gulf of America." Does Trump have the lawful authority to change the name of an international body of water, especially one not within the boundaries of the United States. Scripps News has produced the best article I've foundon the subject, and it states as follows:

[Trump is] not the first one to bring up this idea. In 2012, a member of the Mississippi Legislature proposed a bill to rename portions of the gulf that touch that state's beaches “Gulf of America,” a move the bill author later referred to as a “joke.” That bill, which was referred to a committee, did not pass.Changing the name would not be a unilateral decision, and other countries don't have to go along.

The International Hydrographic Organization — of which both the United States and Mexico are members — works to ensure all the world’s seas, oceans and navigable waters are surveyed and charted uniformly, and also names some of them. There are instances where countries refer to the same body of water or landmarks by different names in their own documentation.

 In others words, Trump has no authority to rename the Gulf of Mexico, and he cannot make anyone go along with what he claims to do. The Gulf of Mexico, of course, is the Gulf of Mexico -- and it has been since the days of Christopher Columbus. It is the 'Gulf of America" primarily in the fertile imagination of a president whose ego greatly exceeds his intellect.

It is unclear how many of Trump's MAGA supporters consider it the "Gulf of America"

-- but if you are ignorant enough to vote for Trump, you lose your right to have anyone

care, or respect, what you believe. Trump is not the only dim bulb in the administration. Fox/Yahoo let us know of others:

White House deputy chief of staff Taylor Budowich wrote on X at the time, "The Associated Press continues to ignore the lawful geographic name change of the Gulf of America. This decision is not just divisive, but it also exposes the Associated Press' commitment to misinformation. While their right to irresponsible and dishonest reporting is protected by the First Amendment, it does not ensure their privilege of unfettered access to limited spaces, like the Oval Office and Air Force One."

Days before, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt had said that "it is a fact that the body of water off the coast of Louisiana is called the Gulf of America, and I’m not sure why news outlets don’t want to call it that."

In a statement Tuesday, AP spokeswoman Lauren Easton expressed gratitude for the decision. AP handled the whole charade with an abundance of class, and it makes me proud to be a journalist.