How Appealing



Wednesday, June 4, 2025

“Judge Orders Trump Administration to Take Steps to Give Due Process to Deported Migrants; The judge also said the men, expelled under the Alien Enemies Act, were likely to prevail in their claims that they had been treated unfairly, deported with no chance to contest their removals”: Alan Feuer of The New York Times has this report.

Jeremy Roebuck of The Washington Post has an article headlined “Judge: Migrants sent to Salvadoran prison need chance to challenge removals; U.S. Judge James E. Boasberg said deportees were ‘plainly deprived’ of their right to contest their removals before being flown to a Salvadoran prison in March.”

Mariah Timms of The Wall Street Journal reports that “Trump Administration Must Address Rights of Migrants Sent to El Salvador, Judge Rules; Decision sets up another showdown between Trump administration, courts over use of wartime law to remove hundreds of people.”

And Stephen Dinan of The Washington Times reports that “Judge orders due process for illegal immigrants deported to El Salvador’s terrorist prison.”

You can access today’s ruling of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia at this link.

Posted at 9:22 PM by Howard Bashman



“Trump nominees for judgeships face scrutiny of youth, lack of experience”: Erin Mansfield of USA Today has this report.

Alex Swoyer of The Washington Times reports that “Senators battle it out over Trump, rule of law during first appeals court nominee’s hearing.”

Nate Raymond of Reuters reports that “Trump appellate court nominee defends experience at US Senate hearing.”

Hailey Fuchs of Politico reports that “Confirmation process begins for Trump’s first judicial nominees; The Trump administration has fewer vacancies to fill this time around but still wants to put a conservative tilt on the federal bench.”

And Benjamin S. Weiss of Courthouse News Service reports that “ABA sidelined as Trump’s first federal judges go under the Senate knife; The president’s current picks for a key appellate court vacancy and a group of federal courts are the first nominees in decades not to receive a rating from the country’s foremost legal professional organization.”

You can access the video of today’s Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing via this link.

Posted at 8:48 PM by Howard Bashman