Something must be done to make amends.

The Never-Ending Abrego Garcia Saga

The Trump administration spent another day in court stonewalling U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis of Maryland, defying her explicit order to put on a government witness who could testify with direct knowledge of its efforts to deport the much-abused Kilmar Abrego Garcia to a third country. I was at the courthouse and wrote a full report on that aspect of the hearing.

Separately, on the merits of the case, the Trump administration seems increasingly hobbled by its inability to produce any evidence that a final order of removal was ever issued for Abrego Garcia. Xinis has all but concluded that a final order of removal simply never existed, and her pending decision may well turn on that omission, as Politico’s Josh Gerstein reports.

The bitter irony is that the absence of a final order of removal means Abrego Garcia’s wrongful deportation to El Salvador in March was doubly unlawful. We already knew that it was in violation of an immigration judge order that he not be removed to El Salvador specifically, but it now appears likely there was no legal basis to remove him anywhere at all.


Sadly, this is only one example of the regime's lawless behavior.

Even though I understand Obama's rationale for not pursuing charges against members of Shrub's admin for the torture of detainees, I thought it was a mistake not to. This time around the country can't afford to turn a blind eye to what Pam Bondi has facilitated. Some kind of reckoning is called for even if it is only to make provisions so abuses of law by the DoJ have a more immediate method of recourse.

This was written after trump 1.0. trump 2.0 is much worse.

Repairing the Rule of Law: An Agenda for Post-Trump Reform​

As the U.S. begins to see the light at the end of the Trumpian tunnel, it is time to begin thinking about the issue of repair. One should not assume the result of the election, but it is nonetheless worth asking the question: What should be done in a post-Trump world to restore the rule of law?

Of Trump’s many excesses, his assault on legal norms has to rank high in terms of damage to fundamental values that form the fabric of America. His attacks on the free press, the independent judiciary and the independence of the Department of Justice have all created significant damage. His abuse of executive discretionary authority has made a mockery of the concept of checks and balances. His gaming of the judicial system has revealed weaknesses in our legal process. His attempts to place himself (and his family and his business interests) above the law have called into question foundational national conceptions of equal justice. In short, President Trump has led a wrecking crew (aided and abetted by William Barr and Mitch McConnell) that has severely damaged American legal norms of behavior.

Trump’s attacks on foundational norms and principles leave policymakers with two choices. Lawmakers and voters can accept that damage and admit the inevitability of American decline, or they can fight to restore and strengthen the country’s legal guardrails. This post is an effort to begin that fight—to identify practical steps that the country can take to reinvigorate the rule of law and the concept of checks and balances.

**** that violent gangster.
 
The Never-Ending Abrego Garcia Saga

The Trump administration spent another day in court stonewalling U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis of Maryland, defying her explicit order to put on a government witness who could testify with direct knowledge of its efforts to deport the much-abused Kilmar Abrego Garcia to a third country. I was at the courthouse and wrote a full report on that aspect of the hearing.

Separately, on the merits of the case, the Trump administration seems increasingly hobbled by its inability to produce any evidence that a final order of removal was ever issued for Abrego Garcia. Xinis has all but concluded that a final order of removal simply never existed, and her pending decision may well turn on that omission, as Politico’s Josh Gerstein reports.

The bitter irony is that the absence of a final order of removal means Abrego Garcia’s wrongful deportation to El Salvador in March was doubly unlawful. We already knew that it was in violation of an immigration judge order that he not be removed to El Salvador specifically, but it now appears likely there was no legal basis to remove him anywhere at all.


Sadly, this is only one example of the regime's lawless behavior.

Even though I understand Obama's rationale for not pursuing charges against members of Shrub's admin for the torture of detainees, I thought it was a mistake not to. This time around the country can't afford to turn a blind eye to what Pam Bondi has facilitated. Some kind of reckoning is called for even if it is only to make provisions so abuses of law by the DoJ have a more immediate method of recourse.

This was written after trump 1.0. trump 2.0 is much worse.

Repairing the Rule of Law: An Agenda for Post-Trump Reform​

As the U.S. begins to see the light at the end of the Trumpian tunnel, it is time to begin thinking about the issue of repair. One should not assume the result of the election, but it is nonetheless worth asking the question: What should be done in a post-Trump world to restore the rule of law?

Of Trump’s many excesses, his assault on legal norms has to rank high in terms of damage to fundamental values that form the fabric of America. His attacks on the free press, the independent judiciary and the independence of the Department of Justice have all created significant damage. His abuse of executive discretionary authority has made a mockery of the concept of checks and balances. His gaming of the judicial system has revealed weaknesses in our legal process. His attempts to place himself (and his family and his business interests) above the law have called into question foundational national conceptions of equal justice. In short, President Trump has led a wrecking crew (aided and abetted by William Barr and Mitch McConnell) that has severely damaged American legal norms of behavior.

Trump’s attacks on foundational norms and principles leave policymakers with two choices. Lawmakers and voters can accept that damage and admit the inevitability of American decline, or they can fight to restore and strengthen the country’s legal guardrails. This post is an effort to begin that fight—to identify practical steps that the country can take to reinvigorate the rule of law and the concept of checks and balances.

Garcia is a gangbanger and human smuggler

He deserves to be deported
 
Why is it exactly that you want so many illegal immigrants to this nation left alone? What's the goal?
Because many contribute to the strength of the country. Ultimately, the goal would be to allow qualified immigrants to participate in a program to become legal citizens as was proposed in the 2013 immigration reform bill the Senate passed in bipartisan fashion.
 
Because many contribute to the strength of the country.
What is it exactly that the latest crop (millions) of illegal immigrants contribute?
Ultimately, the goal would be to allow qualified immigrants to participate in a program to become legal citizens as was proposed in the 2013 immigration reform bill the Senate passed in bipartisan fashion.
Explain "qualified" please..

And just so you know Berg, I'm asking questions because I want to fully understand your position on this...
 
See post #8.
Two points

During the biden admin a judge looked at garcia’s file and decided he was a gang banger

2nd, the Tenn Highway Patrol busted him transporting illegal aliens from Texas to the East Coast

He’s every much as bad as trump says he is
 
Explain "qualified" please..
I refer you to the 2013 bill.


Boehner blocking a floor vote in the House was one of the greatest legislative mistakes with tragic consequences of the last 20 years.
 
Two points

During the biden admin a judge looked at garcia’s file and decided he was a gang banger

2nd, the Tenn Highway Patrol busted him transporting illegal aliens from Texas to the East Coast

He’s every much as bad as trump says he is
Even if any of the accusations you made are true there is a larger principle at stake here. Being a heinous criminal (so far there is no evidence Garcia is one) does not excuse the regime's lawless approach to dealing with one. Surely you understand that.
 
Can Trump Just Do Whatever He Wants by Declaring Emergencies?

The United States is a nation in crisis, President Trump says. The problems are both profound and urgent. He knows how to fix them, but his ideas are hard to implement: They require new legislation or lumbering legal petitions. Luckily, there’s an easier way. The law often gives the president new and broad powers in a state of emergency.

So he has declared nearly a dozen. Trump says he can impose tariffs because he says it’s an emergency to contain trade deficits. He can deport immigrants without due process because it’s an emergency to fight a Venezuelan gang’s invasion. He can dispatch the National Guard to American cities like Los Angeles because it’s an emergency to quell protests and crime. He can ask the Supreme Court for emergency rulings on legal challenges to his authority because we can’t afford to wait for judges to debate his policies.

All this exposes a diabolical problem in our legal order: An emergency is in the eye of the beholder. Do these problems of debatable urgency demand an immediate response? The trade imbalance is generations old. Immigrants — even foreign gangs — are not an invading army. Protesters aren’t rebels. Crime has plunged nationwide, including in all of the cities Trump says need urgent protection. He could wait for courts to decide if he has the power to remake the government, as his predecessors generally have.

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/04/briefing/trump-emergency-presidential-power.html
 
Even if any of the accusations you made are true there is a larger principle at stake here. Being a heinous criminal (so far there is no evidence Garcia is one) does not excuse the regime's lawless approach to dealing with one. Surely you understand that.
I dont see many larger principles involved thst require defending a girl friend beating, illegal alien gang banging smuggler from deportation
 
Two points

During the biden admin a judge looked at garcia’s file and decided he was a gang banger

2nd, the Tenn Highway Patrol busted him transporting illegal aliens from Texas to the East Coast

He’s every much as bad as trump says he is
AI Overview

Several judges have made findings related to an individual named
Kilmar Abrego Garcia, with differing conclusions based on the type of court proceeding.
  • In 2019 bond hearings, an immigration judge and an appeals court judge determined there was sufficient evidence to support allegations of gang affiliation (based primarily on a confidential police informant's report and clothing descriptions) to deny him bond and keep him in custody. These were not criminal trials, and the standards of evidence were lower; the government's claims were largely taken at face value, and the burden was on Garcia to prove he was not a danger or flight risk.
  • In a subsequent 2019 hearing for "withholding of removal" status, a different immigration judge, after a full review and "credible testimony" from Garcia, found insufficient evidence to support the gang allegations and granted him protection from deportation to El Salvador because he would likely face persecution there. The government did not appeal this decision.
 
I dont see many larger principles involved thst require defending a girl friend beating, illegal alien gang banging smuggler from deportation
You choose to believe unproven allegations against Garcia to justify the regime's actions. I do not.
 
AI Overview

Several judges have made findings related to an individual named
Kilmar Abrego Garcia, with differing conclusions based on the type of court proceeding.
  • In 2019 bond hearings, an immigration judge and an appeals court judge determined there was sufficient evidence to support allegations of gang affiliation (based primarily on a confidential police informant's report and clothing descriptions) to deny him bond and keep him in custody. These were not criminal trials, and the standards of evidence were lower; the government's claims were largely taken at face value, and the burden was on Garcia to prove he was not a danger or flight risk.
  • In a subsequent 2019 hearing for "withholding of removal" status, a different immigration judge, after a full review and "credible testimony" from Garcia, found insufficient evidence to support the gang allegations and granted him protection from deportation to El Salvador because he would likely face persecution there. The government did not appeal this decision.
So the last judge is somehow smarter than the first two?

I dont think so
 
You choose to believe unproven allegations against Garcia to justify the regime's actions. I do not.
He is in the US illegally

That is not unproven
 
15th post
So the last judge is somehow smarter than the first two?

I dont think so
The point being the evidence was not compelling. In the first instance relying on the dubious testimony of a cop.
 
The point being the evidence was not compelling. In the first instance relying on the dubious testimony of a cop.
The evidence against Garcia was compelling to two out of three judges that reviewed it
 
He is in the US illegally

That is not unproven
Unless I'm mistaken he had temporary legal status.

AI Overview

Kilmar Abrego Garcia currently holds a temporary legal status in the U.S. known as
"withholding of removal," which bars the government from deporting him to his native El Salvador due to a credible fear of gang violence. He does not have permanent residency status or a path to citizenship through this status.
 
Do you think trump is innocent of defying a subpoena for the return of classified docs?
Biden had documents for decades and so have others. That’s what law-fare is when it is only done against one side and not the other. Hell, Hillary conducted classified business over her own server that could have been hacked.
 
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