A federal judge in Boston was holding a hearing on Wednesday to determine whether the Trump administration violated an order he issued last month barring officials from deporting people to countries not their own without first giving them 15 days’ warning.
Eight immigrants had been flown from an airport in Texas to a third country on Tuesday, officials at the Homeland Security Department confirmed at a news conference in Washington as the hearing was set to begin, but they refused to say where the men were headed.
At the hearing, a lawyer for the Justice Department told Judge Brian E. Murphy, who is presiding over the case, that the flight had landed, but that any operational details about where it was or where it was going had to be shared with the court under seal.
But according to two people familiar with the matter, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to comment publicly, the flight carrying the deportees had landed for now in the east African nation of Djibouti. U.S. military personnel in Djibouti were standing by to assist with securing detainees if needed, one U.S. official said.
Flight-tracking data shows a private jet owned by a company that has previously provided deportation flights left an airport in Harlingen, Texas, on Tuesday around noon. The aircraft, a Gulfstream V, crossed the Atlantic Ocean, stopped at an airport in Shannon, Ireland, and continued on Wednesday morning to Djibouti, where it landed in the early evening. Flight-tracking data shows it was the only U.S.-registered civilian aircraft to land in Djibouti on Wednesday.
Lawyers for some of the deportees said in court on Tuesday evening that their clients had been told that they were ultimately headed to South Sudan.
But when pressed Wednesday about whether the plane was headed, Tricia McLaughlin, a spokeswoman for D.H.S., would only say that South Sudan was not the final destination for the flight.
Documents provided by D.H.S. showed that the eight men were citizens of Cuba, Laos, Mexico, South Sudan, Burma and Vietnam, and had been convicted of crimes including murder, sexual assault and robbery.
“We conducted a deportation flight from Texas to remove some of the most barbaric violent individuals illegally in the United States,” Ms. McLaughlin told reporters, adding that the offenses the men had committed were “uniquely monstrous and barbaric.”
Lawyers for some of the migrants had rushed to court Tuesday evening to ask Judge Murphy to intervene in the possible deportations to South Sudan, a violence-plagued country in Africa that the State Department advises Americans not to visit.
Judge Murphy said Tuesday he was concerned that his order had been violated. That order, which was handed down in April, directed officials to provide notice of at least 15 days to any immigrants being deported to a country not their own so that they had a chance to challenge their removal.
Flight-tracking data shows that the plane that traveled from Texas to Djibouti is owned by Journey Aviation, a charter aircraft company that has worked for the U.S. government.
In an email, the chief executive of Journey Aviation declined to comment, referring questions to the Homeland Security Department.
The questions raised about the possible flight to South Sudan was the fourth time that immigration lawyers have accused the Trump administration of bending — if not outright violating — the order by Judge Murphy in the last month. The other accusations have involved a flight of Venezuelan immigrants from Cuba to El Salvador, a planned flight of Laotian, Vietnamese and Filipino immigrants to Libya and the deportation of a Guatemalan man to Mexico.
At the hearing on Tuesday, Judge Murphy seemed to be losing patience with the government. He told lawyers for the Justice Department that if he ultimately determined that the administration had violated his instructions, everyone involved in the flight to South Sudan — up to and including the pilots who flew the plane — could face sanctions for criminal contempt.
The standoff in Judge Murphy’s Boston courtroom is one of several deportation proceedings in which the administration has faced accusations of both denying immigrants due process and of flouting court orders.
In a similar case, a federal judge in Washington, James E. Boasberg, has opened an inquiry into whether Trump officials violated an order he issued in March seeking to stop flights of immigrants to El Salvador under the expansive powers of an 18th century law called the Alien Enemies Act.
That inquiry is temporarily on hold as the appeals court that sits over Judge Boasberg considers a request by the Justice Department to end it. Judge Boasberg is also considering whether to allow immigration lawyers to continue their efforts to seek a court order forcing the government to bring back about 140 Venezuelan men who went sent on the flights to El Salvador, without first being given due process.
The same three flights, which took off from an airport in Texas on March 15, have triggered two other contentious legal cases.
In one of them, a federal judge in Maryland, Paula Xinis, has opened an inquiry into whether Trump officials have violated a Supreme Court ruling to “facilitate” the release of Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia, a Maryland man who was deported to El Salvador on one of the March 15 flights, despite a court order expressly forbidding him from being sent there.
In the other, another federal judge, Stephanie A. Gallagher, in the same judicial district has ordered the government to the facilitate the return of a different man — a 20-year-old Venezuelan — who was also deported to El Salvador on the flights, but in violation of a totally different court order.
Judge Gallagher’s ruling was temporarily upheld on Monday by a federal appeals court in Virginia, which noted the Trump administration’s repeated efforts to sidestep court rulings.
“As is becoming far too common,” one of the appeals court judges, Roger Gregory, wrote, “we are confronted again with the efforts of the executive branch to set aside the rule of law in pursuit of its goals.”
Mattathias Schwartz, Riley Mellen and Aric Toler contributed reporting.
Alan Feuer covers extremism and political violence for The Times, focusing on the criminal cases involving the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol and against former President Donald J. Trump.
Tyler Pager is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President Trump and his administration.
Hamed Aleaziz covers the Department of Homeland Security and immigration policy for The Times.
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