President Trump issued another warning to judges who have issued rulings that would curb his migrant deportation plans – saying ‘you can’t have a trial for all of these people.’

The president directed his comments at judges after yet another federal jurist, this one in New York, blocked migrants being held in the state from being deported without due process.

‘And I hope we get cooperation from the courts, because, you know, we have thousands of people that are ready to go out, and you can’t have a trial for all of these people,’ Trump said at the White House Tuesday.

‘It wasn’t meant – the system wasn’t meant. And we don’t think there’s anything that says that,’ he said, offering his administration’s interpretation of the law.

‘Look, we are getting some very bad people, killers, murderers, drug dealers, really bad people, the mentally ill, the mentally insane,’ he said.

Then Trump – who at the same event said he had ‘no intention’ of firing Fed chair Jerome Powell in another brewing clash over executive power – complained about the delay that individual trials would place on the courts.

‘And a judge can’t say, No, you have to have a trial that lets – the trial’s going to take two years. We’re going to have a very we’re going to have a very dangerous country if we’re not allowed to do what we’re entitled to do. And I won an election based on the fact that we get them out,’ Trump said.

‘You can’t have a trial for all of these people,’ said President Donald Trump Tuesday while warning judges about delays that would result from granting hearings to migrants being deported

Trump border czar Tom Homan raised similar complaints during a Fox News appearance Wednesday – even claiming there was a Democratic ‘plan’ to slow deportations on purpose.

‘I think due process was given like the the Maryland father, the MS-13 terrorist that was removed. He had due process. He was already removed by two different immigration judges,’ said Homan.

He was referring to Kilmar Ábrego García, the Maryland man and Venezuelan migrant who the administration deported to an infamous prison in El Salvador last month. He was arrested in 2019, and was granted protections from an immigration judge after he argued he risked persecution by gangs in his native country, despite having come to the U.S. illegally.

The government says an informant accused Ábrego García of being in a violent gang, but he was never charged with the crime.

Homan also pushed back at federal judge Paula Xinis of Maryland, who scolded government lawyers who she said ‘have failed to respond in good faith, and their refusal to do so can only be viewed as willful and intentional noncompliance.’ She is conducting a review of whether to hold them in contempt.

‘Bad faith? We removed an MS-13 gang member, public safety threat, wife beater, designated terrorist from the United States. He’s home. He’s a citizen El Salvador, a of native El Salvador, who had due process, despite what you’re hearing.’

Homan said the Biden administration ‘overwhelmed the system’ during a crush of illegal immigration.  

‘They know it’s going to take years to get through the court docket. By then, they’re hoping there’s another Democratic administration,’ he claimed.

Trump’s comment about dispensing with trials – people found in the country illegally under normal circumstances get a hearing before an immigration judge – drew angry pushback online.

Wrote Rep. Jonathan L. Jackson, an Illinois Democrat: ‘We can’t give everyone a trial’ — excuse me, what?! That’s straight-up #dictator talk. Due process isn’t optional because it’s inconvenient. This is the United States, not a banana republic. If you want to shred the Constitution, just say so,’ he posted on X. 

U.S. District Judge James Boasberg initiated contempt proceedings of administration officials over deportation flights that took alleged Venezuelan gang members to an infamous prison in El Salvador



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