WASHINGTON — An appeals court on Friday tossed out a judge’s contempt finding against the Trump administration in a case over deportations to an El Salvador prison.
The decision from a divided three-judge panel based in the nation’s capital vacates a finding from U.S District Judge James E. Boasberg.
Boasberg found in April there was probable cause to hold President Donald Trump's administration in criminal contempt of court.
Judges Gregory Katsas and Neomi Rao, both of whom were nominated by Trump in his first term in the White House, concurred with the unsigned majority opinion. Judge Cornelia Pillard, who was appointed by President Barack Obama, dissented.
Boasberg had accused Trump administration officials of rushing deportees out of the country under the Alien Enemies Act before they could challenge their removal in court and then willfully disregarding his order that planes already in the air should return to the United States.
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The Republican administration has denied violating his order.

President Donald Trump speaks Thursday as he signs a proclamation declaring National Purple Heart Day in the East Room of the White House.
Justice Department subpoenas Letitia James
The Justice Department has subpoenaed New York’s attorney general as it investigates whether she violated Trump’s civil rights. That’s according to people familiar with the matter on Friday.
The subpoenas mark an escalation of the Trump administration’s ongoing efforts to scrutinize perceived adversaries of the president, including those like James who had investigated Trump before his election win last November.
News of the subpoena comes as the Justice Department advances an investigation into the Trump-Russia probe that shadowed Trump for much of his first term and as the administration engages in a widespread purge of law enforcement officials who had been involved in examining the activities of Trump and his supporters.
Trump orders federal law enforcers onto D.C. streets
°Â¾±³Ù³óÌý calling for a , the White House says there will be an increased presence of federal law enforcement on the streets of Washington, D.C., for at least the next week. “We have to run D.C.,†Trump told reporters.
But doing so would require  of 1973 in Congress and could face steep pushback. This was prompted by the  nicknamed ‘Big Balls’ by a group of teenagers. Carjackings and homicides are actually down sharply in D.C. after spiking in 2023.
A two-hour tour of the D.C. streets, starting around 1 a.m. Friday morning, revealed no evidence of the sort of multiagency flood of uniformed personnel described in Trump’s announcement.
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Trump says US can’t afford to return the revenues if a court rules his tariffs illegal
The president says there would be another “GREAT DEPRESSION!†if a U.S. Appeals Court rules he exceeded his authority by declaring an emergency to impose the taxes and mandates repayment of the billions of dollars collected so far.
“If a Radical Left Court ruled against us at this late date, in an attempt to bring down or disturb the largest amount of money, wealth creation and influence the U.S.A. has ever seen, it would be impossible to ever recover, or pay back, these massive sums of money and honor,†Trump said. “It would be 1929 all over again.â€
The government has collected about $130 billion in tariff revenues so far this year, about $74 billion more than it did last year, according to the Bipartisan Policy Center.
California working to plan still unscheduled redistricting election
California Democrats are rushing to schedule an emergency election to remake U.S. House districts in response to . This presents a dilemma for county officials, who are being urged to plan for an election that hasn’t been scheduled and might never happen.
Orchestrating an election by nearly 23 million registered voters across 58 counties is a time-consuming and costly endeavor under any circumstances, but  and Democrats leading the Legislature already have blown past deadlines for organizing everything from printing mail ballots in multiple languages to lining up staff and securing voting locations.
Democrats are considering new political maps that could slash five Republican-held House seats in the liberal-leaning state while bolstering Democratic incumbents in other battleground districts, leaving Republicans with just four safe House seats among 52 in the state. The California maps could be unveiled as soon as next week.
Republicans escalate pressure on holdout Texas Democrats
The Texas House will try to reconvene at 1 p.m. Friday as Democratic lawmakers remain outside the state  Republicans drew after Trump asked for more winnable seats. Relatedly:
1. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has pledged to take legal action to get missing Democrats removed from office if they don’t appear
2. The House Democratic Caucus chair must respond this afternoon to a similar effort filed by Gov. Greg Abbott with the Texas Supreme Court
3. This session ends Aug. 19, but Abbott says he’ll keep calling special sessions until the outnumbered Democrats return
4. The missing lawmakers already face mounting daily fines and civil arrest warrants issued by the state House
5. Sen. John Cornyn has said the  to help Texas authorities locate members
6. Some of the Democrats are meeting again with Gov. Gavin Newsom, who said California will seek  if Texas succeeds.
Under Biden, Vance says US got ‘too comfortable’ with censorship
Vance said he felt that, during President Joe Biden’s administration, the U.S. “got a little too comfortable with censoring rather than engaging with a diverse array of opinions.â€
Moving forward, Vance said he hopes other countries can avoid such “a very dark path.“ The remarks came in response to a question invoking some of Vance’s previous comments about free speech that have ruffled feathers in Europe.
During February remarks to the , Vance said that he feared free speech was “in retreat†across the European continent. That prompted pushback from top German officials, one of whom called it “unacceptable†to draw a parallel with authoritarian governments.
Asked about 2028, Vance scoffs at discussing ‘lowly’ politics in stately UK setting
Asked ahead of his Lammy meeting about Trump’s recent statements that Vance is for now “favored†to be next to take up the MAGA mantle, the vice president quickly pivoted.
“I don’t want to talk about lowly things like politics in this grand palace, come on,†Vance said. “I’m not really focused even on the election in 2026, much less one two years after that.â€
Vance says US ‘has no plans’ to recognize a Palestinian state
During his opening remarks ahead of the meeting with Lammy, Vance was asked about the U.K.’s decision to recognize a Palestinian state.
Vance said he wasn’t sure what such recognition would even mean, “given the lack of a functional government there.â€
Asked if Trump had been given a heads up on Israel’s announced intent to occupy Gaza City, Vance said he would not go into such conversations.
“If it was easy to bring peace to that region of the world, it would have been done already,†he said.
Trump’s tax on endowments already affecting wealthiest universities
The tax increase in Trump’s signature  takes effect next year, but Harvard, Yale and Stanford are already citing having to pay hundreds of millions more in taxes as another reason for layoffs and hiring freezes as they navigate Ìý²¹²Ô»åÌý. Colleges say having to pay much more in taxes could lead to less financial aid for lower-income students.
About a dozen universities fit the new tax parameters, according to an Associated Press  from the National Association of College and University Business Officers:
7. 8% rate: Harvard, Yale, Stanford, Princeton and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
8. 4% rate: Notre Dame, Dartmouth College, Rice University, University of Pennsylvania, Washington University in 51ºÚÁÏ and Vanderbilt University
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