Category: War / War On The Public / War Against Citizens
MS Now clips dealing with ICE
ICE took a 10 yr old girl and shipped her to Texas. They are taking children.Β Conditions are horrible in the concentration camp in Texas.Β The mother and child were legally in the country. The panel discusses mass deportation and the new authorites / power ICE has given it self but is illegal Hugs
The video below shows ICE stopping and assaulting US citizens who were only following the ICE thugs.Β They are out of control and do not want to be videoed doing their illegal actions so they feel free to assault and detain people for just using their civil rights under the constitution.Β Hugs
As To DOJ’s Indictment Of Judge Boasberg:
I’m only about half-through reading this, and already know everyone else needs to see this, too. It’s important to keep up with the attacks on the judiciary. Only a decent-sized snippet here, but do go finish it. This is well written, and it informs. -A.
207. The Justice Department Beclowns Itself (Again)
The denouement of DOJ’s misconduct complaint against Chief Judge Boasberg provides useful lessons relating to both the Department’s continuing misbehavior and the emptiness of calls for impeachment.
Steve Vladeck Feb 02, 2026
There is, as ever, too much court- (and Court-)adjacent news to cover, including this morningβs New York Times double-feature on the Chief Justiceβs move to have Court employees sign non-disclosure agreements and on the Timesβs own expanding coverage of the Court. But I wanted to use todayβs βLong Readβ to come back to a post I wrote last Julyβshortly after the Department of Justice submitted (and then Attorney General Bondi tweeted about) an unprecedented judicial misconduct complaint against the chief judge of the D.C. federal district court, James E. Boasberg. As I wrote at the time, DOJβs complaint was βalmost laughably preposterous.β The gravamen of its charge was that Boasberg had violated the Code of Conduct for United States Judges by relaying (at a private breakfast with the Chief Justice and a group of other district judges before a meeting of the Judicial Conference of the United States) that several of his colleagues were worried about the Trump administration potentially defying their rulings.
That complaint is back in the news because late last week, we finally learned about its outcome. After a bit of procedural shuffling that Iβll explain below, it was dismissed, quite cursorily, by Sixth Circuit Chief Judge Jeffrey Sutton in a β¦ brusque β¦ seven-page memorandum and order. Not only did Sutton pour cold water on DOJβs theor(ies) of Boasbergβs misconduct, but he also expressed understandable frustration with the fact that DOJ never produced the document that it claimed memorialized Boasbergβs alleged misconductβeven after it was specifically told that it needed to do so to substantiate its claims.
In other words, after filing an unprecedented complaint against a sitting federal judge, making a big public stink about it (which, by the way, was itself a violation of the law), and having its complaint invoked as one of the grounds for the proposed impeachment charges against Chief Judge Boasberg, DOJ β¦ never followed through. It turns out, it was never about adjudicating Boasbergβs behavior; it was about making splashy headlines and fueling right-wing attacks on the judiciary without regard to whether DOJβs specious charges would withstand meaningful scrutiny.
The obvious takeaway is that the Department of Justice has once again beclowned itself. Iβd say it has shredded even more of its credibility, but when youβre publicly soliciting for new lawyers to apply via Twitter (with the primary qualification being that they βsupport President Trumpβ), there may not be any credibility left to shred. Instead, the more significant takeaway is that this really ought to be the final nail in the coffin of congressional Republicansβ breathless efforts to gin up impeachment charges against a judge whose only actual sin, as it turns out, was to decline to roll over when the government defied one of his orders, and then lied about it.
(snip-graphic of pleading filed; just click through to see it. Then there is info on other cases of which we may want to be at least aware, then back to this one; a bit more below. Use this link to skip the other cases and get back to this.)
The One First βLong Readβ:
The Denouement of the Boasberg Misconduct Mess
My post from last July walked through the background and details of the Justice Departmentβs judicial misconduct complaint against Chief Judge Boasberg (and why it suffered from four independently fatal defects). Iβd encourage folks to refer back to that post if you could use more context.
In a nutshell, DOJβs chief accusation was that Boasberg had violated the Code of Conduct for United States Judges by publicly suggesting that he had βpre-judgedβ the merits of specific cases involving the Trump administration (even though, in fact, Boasberg had only privately relayed concerns that his colleagues had raised about how the Trump administration might behave in unnamed future cases). Indeed, at the time Boasberg made the relevant comments, the lawsuit in which his interactions with the Trump administration have been most visibleβthe J.G.G. Alien Enemies Act caseβhadnβt even been filed yet. Nonetheless, DOJ decided to make hay out of Boasbergβs alleged misbehavior, and six Republican senators have since piled on by urging D.C. Circuit Chief Judge Sri Srinivasan (who, by law, was the recipient of DOJβs misconduct complaint) to suspend Boasberg while the complaint (and a potential impeachment investigation) was pending.2
The process created by the Judicial Conduct and Disability Act of 1980 is supposed to be almost entirely confidential (which is why Attorney General Bondiβs tweet announcing the complaint was itself likely a violation of the act). But we often learn about the dispositions, at least, once the complaint has been fully resolved. Thatβs why we learned last week about the result of DOJβs complaint; not only had Chief Judge Sutton dismissed it, but the 30-day period within which DOJ could have sought further review of Suttonβs decision (by filing a βpetition for reviewβ with the full Sixth Circuit Judicial Council) had expired.3
As for how DOJβs complaint made its way to Sutton, Suttonβs memorandum explains the procedural history:
On November 26, in view of several appellate challenges to the judgeβs rulings in the underlying case [J.G.G.] and of concerns that the judges on the D.C. Circuit might have to recuse themselves from any proceedings before the Judicial Council, Chief Judge Srinivasan asked Chief Justice Roberts to transfer the judicial misconduct proceeding to another circuit. On December 5, the Chief Justice transferred the matter to the Judicial Council of the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit for resolution.
Sutton, who I have to think the Chief Justice did not pick at random (Roberts could have referred the complaint to any of the chief judges of the other circuits), made quick work of DOJβs complaintβdismissing it just two weeks after he received it. His seven-page ruling is worth readingβnot just for its thoroughness, but because, if youβre not used to reading these kinds of rulings, it is all-but-dripping with contempt for the Department of Justiceβs behavior.
In short, Sutton found four different problems with DOJβs complaint:
(snip. Yup, you know you want to know, so go read his piece and give it a like if you care to, after you finish.)
Minnesota Fights Back | Rep Aisha Gomez | TMR
Pritzker Promises To Hold Trump Accountable
Democrat Bucks Schumer With Anti-ICE Video
ICE’s Tracing Tool
I saw this yesterday and intended to post it for Sunday morning. It’s suppertime on Sunday, so it goes live Monday morning. It’ll keep until then. Click on through; it’s not too long. There are good graphics there, and that helped me.
Here is the User Guide for ELITE, the Tool Palantir Made for ICE
Joseph Cox Β·Jan 30, 2026 at 9:49 AM
404 Media is publishing a version of the user guide for ELITE, which lets ICE bring up dossiers on individual people and provides a βconfidence scoreβ of their address.
Earlier this month we revealed Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is using a Palantir tool called ELITE to decide which neighborhoods to raid.
The tool lets ICE populate a map with potential deportation targets, bring up dossiers on each person, and view an address βconfidence scoreβ based on data sourced from the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and other government agencies. This is according to a user guide for ELITE 404 Media obtained.
404 Media is now publishing a version of that user guide so people can read it for themselves.Β (snip-MORE)
In the Wake of Another ICE Killing | Wali Khan | TMR
Ok to be honest why do all these new journalists seem like young teens to me?Β They are all cute and I want to advise them to go out and play. Sorry, that is the most ageist thing I know to say.Β But look at this young man and don’t tell me you don’t see him as a kid like I did the first time I watched this. Hugs
How to Block ICE | Rep. Ro Khanna | TMR Please see note below.
I often complain that democrats don’t use the media or appear on it enough for the public to understand what the party stands for.Β This is a congress critter who goes on numerous podcasts and media.Β I don’t always agree with him, but I am glad he is putting his / our voice out there.Β I just can’t help but wonder, where is the leadership of the party?Β They should either be standing next to these younger people supporting them as they voice the party possition or they should move aside and let these younger people take leadership.Β Hugs
Some posts I found while doing the cartoon / memes / news round up but the post was getting far too long. All I feel are important but I can’t all of them fully.