An appeals court paused the inquiry earlier this year, but said on Nov. 14 it he could proceed.
A federal judge said on Nov. 19 that he intends to move ahead with a criminal contempt-of-court inquiry to find out why government officials ignored his order halting the deportation of a group of illegal immigrants to El Salvador earlier this year.
โI certainly intend to find out what happened on that day,โ U.S. District Judge James Boasberg said during a hearing on Wednesday.
He gave both attorneys representing the deportees and the government until Monday to submit advice on how he should proceed, including which witnesses should appear before the court.
Boasberg told the court on Wednesday that he wants to know exactly which government officials were responsible for defying his order.
In March, Boasberg ordered that three plane loads of illegal immigrantsโbeing deported under the Alien Enemies Actโwere not to go to El Salvadorโs CECOT terrorist detainment center.
The flight plans were not halted.
This prompted Boasbergโs original contempt inquiry in April, which, in August, was temporarily vacated by the U.S Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit.
After months of deliberation, a wider panel of judges issued an order on Nov. 14, saying he could carry on with his contempt inquiry.
โThe district court remains free to require the government to identify the decision makers who directed the potentially contemptuous actions and to carefully consider next steps,โ the order said.
Tiberius Davis, arguing for the Department of Justice, on Wednesday objected to Boasbergโs decision, noting that the Supreme Court itself overturned the judgeโs previous orders.
โI will be going forward with it,โ Boasberg said.
The matter arises from a suit filed by Venezuelan illegal immigrants accused by the federal government of being members of the Tren de Aragua gang, which the State Department designated as a foreign terrorist group in February.
The lead plaintiff, identified only by the initials J.G.G., protests that he is not a member of the gang.
According to the suit, he fled Venezuela after being beaten and tortured by state police.







