Judges are regularly threatening contempt charges against the DOJ in immigration cases
Source: CNN Politics
PUBLISHED Feb 10, 2026, 5:00 AM ET
In some two dozen cases stemming from President Donald Trumps immigration crackdown in Minnesota that CNN has reviewed, federal judges appointed to the bench by Democrats and Republicans have had to use terms like contempt and noncompliance to get the governments attention to respond to court orders.
To date, it doesnt appear that any judge in the District of Minnesota has held an agency official or Justice Department attorney in civil contempt of court or imposed sanctions in cases related to Operation Metro Surge. But the sheer number of threats is significant.
Many of the punishment threats have arisen in cases where judges concluded that an immigrant was unlawfully arrested and must immediately be released. Other compliance issues have bubbled up when Immigration and Customs Enforcement releases a noncitizen with certain conditions that they werent subject to prior to their arrest, enraging a judge who never gave permission to impose such constraints.
This is clearly not tenable, Judge Laura Provinzino, an appointee of former President Joe Biden, told one top government attorney late last month. I cant continue to have (federal prosecutors) violating really important orders
If somebody should be released, that has to happen.
Read more: https://www.cnn.com/2026/02/10/politics/judges-contempt-justice-department-minnesota
LonePirate
(14,354 posts)Force Trump to pardon them and let them deal with the consequences.
BumRushDaShow
(167,297 posts)and was smacked down by 2 different D.C. Circuit panels (although the 2nd panel is allowing him to investigate further to get more specific info on the other "whos" who actually participated in the violations and what exactly transpired with the violation, so he has been bringing people in for questioning, and then THAT effort was "paused" for being a "circus".
duckworth969
(1,303 posts)When contempt and non-compliance are running rampant, judges should find and use a bigger stick.
