So I spoke to Margaret Cargioli. She's an attorney with the Immigrant Defenders Law Center, and they're representing a Venezuelan national who came to the U.S. seeking asylum. And this Venezuelan national entered legally through an app that allowed him to declare asylum.

He worked in — he was working in the arts in El Salvador, is LGBTQ, and he was detained for months by ICE. And then his attorneys found out that he was potentially deported to El Salvador over the weekend. And that was confirmed in a hearing today, Margaret Cargioli told me, which was that DHS said that he was deported to El Salvador.

And they believe it was with these other Venezuelan nationals that were sent there. And they say that it's because he had tattoos that DHS claims were evidence that this Venezuelan national has ties to Tren de Aragua. Now, his lawyers say that that's not accurate, that these tattoos are benign, Geoff.

And we just — we have an update from the federal hearing that is challenging the president's use of the Alien Enemies Act. And in that federal hearing today, the Justice Department insisted that they did not defy the verbal order from Judge Boasberg because they were following the written one.

And the judge called this — quote — "a heck of a stretch." And he questioned the government's ability to just ignore his oral ruling. Now, the DOJ didn't provide any details on how many flights took off Saturday, when they took off, or when they landed. And they said that that was — that they wouldn't do that due to national security concerns.

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