Newsweek: Trump administration suffers double legal blow within hours

The Trump administration suffered two legal defeats within hours on Friday.

A judge in California ordered the release of a Syrian national it has been seeking to deport while a federal Rhode Island judge blocked the imposition of new conditions on domestic violence programs as part of the president’s campaign against “gender ideology.”

Details of both cases were shared on X by Kyle Cheney, senior legal affairs reporter for Politico.

Newsweek contacted the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Justice for comment on Saturday outside of regular office hours via email and press inquiry form respectively.

Why It Matters

With Republicans controlling both chambers of Congress as well as the White House the courts have emerged as one of the main impediments to Trump administration policy.

The administration has suffered a number of prominent legal defeats including courts striking down punitive measures introduced by Trump against law firms involved in proceedings against him, blocking a bid to strip thousands of Haitian migrants of legal protection and removing sanctions aimed at International Criminal Court employees.

Release of Salam Maklad

U.S. District Court Judge Jennifer Thurston, of the Eastern District of California, on Friday instructed the release of Salam Maklad, a Syrian from the Druze religious minority who arrived in the United States in 2002 without valid entry documents and claimed asylum, according to court documents seen by Newsweek.

Maklad went on to marry a man who was granted asylum, which her legal team argued made her eligible for legal immigration status.

On July 9, Maklad was detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers after arriving for what she believed was a routine “check-in” meeting and subsequently placed in “expedited removal proceedings” seeking to deport her from the U.S.

Thurston noted that Maklad had no criminal history and wasn’t considered a flight risk, and concluded that “the balance of the equities and public interest weigh in favor of Ms. Maklad.” Consequently she ordered her release from custody and said authorities are blocked from rearresting her “absent compliance with constitutional protections, which
include at a minimum, pre-deprivation notice—describing the change of circumstances necessitating her arrest—and detention, and a timely bond hearing.”

Domestic Violence Funding

Friday also saw Senior District Judge William Smith of Rhode Island rule the Trump administration couldn’t impose fresh conditions on funds granted by the Violence Against Women Act due to the president’s Executive Order 14168 titled “Defending Women from Gender Ideology Extremism and Restoring Biological Truth to the Federal Government.”

This funding is distributed by the Department of Justice’s Office on Violence Against Women.

Trump’s order stated that sex is a person’s “immutable biological classification as male or female,” and that the federal government should “prioritize investigations and litigation to enforce the rights and freedoms” associated with this position.

The Office on Violence Against Women updated its policy on what constitutes “out of scope activities,” and therefore should not be funded by its grants, after this order was issued in “approximately May 2025,” according to the court filing.

This added spending on “inculcating or promoting gender ideology as defined
in Executive Order 14168″ to the prohibited list.

The case was brought by a coalition of 17 nonprofit groups which argued adhering to President Trump’s position on gender was impeding their ability to assist victims of domestic violence.

Judge Smith backed the coalition’s position concluding that the fresh requirements imposed by the Trump administration “could result in the disruption” of services for victims of domestic and sexual violence.

What People Are Saying

In the California case Judge Thurston ruled: “Respondents are PERMANENTLY ENJOINED AND RESTRAINED from re[1]arresting or re-detaining Ms. Maklad absent compliance with constitutional protections, which include at a minimum, pre-deprivation notice—describing the change of circumstances necessitating her arrest—and detention, and a timely bond hearing.

“At any such hearing, the Government SHALL bear the burden of establishing, by clear and convincing evidence, that Ms. Maklad poses a danger to the community or a risk of flight, and Ms. Maklad SHALL be allowed to have her counsel present.”

In his ruling Judge Smith wrote: “On the one hand, if the Court does not grant preliminary relief, then the Coalitions will face real and immediate irreparable harm from the challenged conditions, conditions which the Court has already concluded likely violate the APA.

“This could result in the disruption of important and, in some cases, life[1]saving services to victims of sexual assault and domestic violence. On the other hand, if the Court grants preliminary relief, then the Office will simply have to consider grant applications and award funding as it normally does.”

What’s Next

It remains to be seen whether the Trump’s administration will seek to appeal either of Friday’s rulings.

https://www.newsweek.com/trump-administration-suffers-double-legal-blow-within-hours-2111192

The Times: We’re caged like chickens, say Italians in ‘Alligator Alcatraz’

Gaetano Mirabella Costa and Fernando Artese plead for help after detention in Florida

The families of two Italians held in President Trump’s “Alligator Alcatraz” migrant detention centre have denounced the harsh conditions of their incarceration in Florida and appealed to the Italian authorities for help to get them out.

“We’re in cages like chickens, 32 people with three open toilets, everyone can see everything,” Gaetano Mirabella Costa, 45, told Italian state television in a telephone interview from the prison. “I don’t know what I’m accused of and I can’t speak with a lawyer or even a judge. Can the Italian authorities please help me to get out of this nightmare?”

The Italian, who was born in Taormina, Sicily, and had been living in the US for ten years, had recently served a short prison sentence for assault, drug possession and domestic violence and was transferred to the new detention centre on July 9.

His mother, Rosanna Vitale, said her son had been taken to court with his feet and hands shackled, “like a dog”. The only positive thing was that he was allowed to queue for a telephone to make collect calls from the prison, she said.

“The situation is very tough,” she added. “He said, ‘Mum, I haven’t seen the sun for ten days.’ We still haven’t been contacted by anyone to deal with this situation but we will do everything possible to get him back — we hope soon.”

Another Italian, Fernando Artese, 63, had been living in Florida and overstayed a 90-day visa by almost ten years. He was transferred to the prison at Dade-Collier, in the Everglades swamps, after being stopped by police on June 25.

In March Artese, who has joint Italian and Argentinian nationality, had been fined for driving without a licence. His family said he missed his traffic court date because he feared being detained.

Artese’s family had joined him in 2018 — his wife, Monica Riveira, 62, came on a student visa and his teenage daughter, Carla, legally accompanied her. They had been living in the Florida city of Hialeah, where Artese ran a company installing cameras, and were stopped while attempting to leave the country by driving their mobile home to Argentina.

“This is a concentration camp. They treat us like criminals — it’s a pursuit of humiliation,” Artese told the Tampa Bay Times in a phone interview. “We’re all workers and people fighting for our families.”

Carla Artese, 19, has raised more than $7,000 towards a target of $10,000 on an appeal for her father on the GoFundMe website.

“This year, we were trying to leave the USA, and ICE [Immigration and Customs Enforcement] got him and sent him to Alligator Alcatraz, where they treat them like criminals and [they] have no rights,” she said in the appeal. “They haven’t given him any information about his case or any right to an attorney. Not to mention, they haven’t added him to the system yet, so he doesn’t even appear like an inmate anywhere.”

She said her father wanted “to self-deport when they let him”, adding: “He is a hard worker who only wanted to leave the country with his family after paying taxes and working hard the whole time he’s been here!”

Carla told the Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera her father was lucky because he had previously been detained in another institution and that had given his family the chance to bring him his medicines. “Many don’t have medicine and there’s not much food,” she said. “They can’t sleep at night because the lights are on 24 hours a day. They can’t see the sun, they can’t go outside.”

The migrant detention centre, which has a capacity of 3,000, was built within weeks under the direction of Ron DeSantis, the governor of Florida, using emergency powers. Trump visited a few weeks ago and joked that escaping prisoners would have to run in zig-zag lines to avoid the local alligators.

Opposition politicians have criticised Giorgia Meloni, the Italian prime minister, for allegedly prioritising her friendship with Trump over the rights of her imprisoned compatriots. “Will the government of patriots continue to play majordomo to Trump or does it intend to defend the rights of an Italian citizen?” asked Matteo Renzi, a former prime minister.

Angelo Bonelli, an MP with the Green and Left Alliance, said the government was always ready to curry favour with Washington. “It remains silent even in the face of an obvious violation of human rights,” he said. “Patriots in words, vassals in reality.”

https://www.thetimes.com/us/news-today/article/what-is-alligator-alcatraz-italians-gz2gcqrbd