Fired Justice Department lawyer blows the whistle on what he describes as abuses of power at the DOJ

Arez Ruvanei was on his way up. He was an attorney in the Department of Justice who was so effective defending President Trump’s first term immigration policy that he was promoted right away in Trump’s second term. But Ruvane’s 15-year Justice Department career ended suddenly after he says he witnessed government lawyers lying in court and evading orders of a judge. These last few months have been a time of upheaval in the Justice Department. Now Ruane’s claims are raising concern in courtrooms across the country. The administration has called Ruveni a leaker seeking five minutes of fame. But in his first television interview, eras Ruvanei told us he’s paid a price. Speaking up cost him his dream. The story will continue in a moment. Even before I went to law school, I understood what I wanted to do as a lawyer was to be involved in public service. And everyone understood at the time you do it at the Department of Justice in Washington DC. There’s no better place as a young attorney to just do the sorts of cases where you’re standing up in court as a first chair attorney on behalf of the United States doing things that law firm partners don’t do and that meant what to you? That meant I was there on behalf of the American people on behalf of the millions of citizens of this country to make sure that justice was done. Eros Ruanei started in 2010 as a so-called career attorney. Most lawyers at the Justice Department stay for years, even decades, defending the policies of one president after another. Ravaney specialized in immigration law. And in the first Trump term, he defended the controversial ban on travelers from Muslim countries, among many other cases. I was promoted. I received three awards for defense of fairly high-profile litigation. I defended everything they put on my plate. That was my job. And at the beginning of the second Trump administration, you were promoted again. That’s right. Very soon into the administration, I was selected to be the acting deputy director of the immigration section, overseeing about 100 attorneys and every case that arose in the federal district courts. But it was the very day of that promotion, Friday, March 14th, that he and others were called to a fateful meeting with Amal Boie, President Trump’s newly appointed number three at the Justice Department, who was once Trump’s criminal defense attorney. And we were told at this meeting that over the weekend, the president of the United States would be signing a proclamation invoking something called the Alien Enemies Act. This is a wartime law from 1798 invoked three times in the nation’s history during the War of 1812, World War I, and World War II. The Alien Enemies Act allows rapid expulsion from the US of the citizens of enemy nations during a war. But without a declared war, Trump used it against more than 100 Venezuelans that the government said were terrorists. They were to be denied their right to be heard by a judge. Ruvanei says Boie expected a challenge. Boie emphasized those planes need to take off no matter what. And then after a pause, he also told all in attendance, “And if some court should issue an order preventing that, we may have to consider telling that court you.” And when you heard that, you thought what? Felt like a bomb had gone off. Here is the number three official using expletives to tell career attorneys that we may just have to consider disregarding federal court orders. The next day, Saturday, lawyers for the prisoners sued. Judge James Booseberg called a hearing and asked government lawyer Drew Enson whether the planes were leaving that weekend. And Enson says to Boseberg, “I don’t know.” Now, Enson was at the same meeting that I was at the day before where we were told in no uncertain terms that planes were taking off over the weekend, that those planes needed to take off no matter what. And he says, “I don’t know.” Ruvanei says that moment in court was stunning. It is the highest most egregious violation of a lawyer’s code of ethics to mislead a court with intent. We don’t know Inson’s intent. It was during the hearing that the planes took off. The judge issued an order and immediately Ruvaney emailed the agencies involved. The judge specifically ordered us to not remove anyone and to return anyone in the air, but that didn’t happen. Instead, more than 5 hours after Booseberg’s order, the detainees and other prisoners arrived at a maximum security prison in El Salvador. And then it really hit me. It’s like, we really did tell the courts, screw you. We really did just tell the courts, “We don’t care about your order. You can’t tell us what to do.” That was just a real gut punch. Department of Justice has the responsibility to obey all court orders. It can disagree with the order. It can appeal it. It can ask the judge to reconsider. But while the order is in effect, it’s the obligation of the department to see to it that the government complies. Peter Kisler should know he ran the Justice Department as acting attorney general in 2007 for George W. Bush. He worked in Ronald Reagan’s White House. And today he’s part of a law firm representing federal workers fired by the administration. But some people watching this interview are thinking if these people have been labeled by the administration as terrorists, as gang members, then we should get them out of the country as quickly as possible. And there are lawful means to get people who are terrorists out of the country. Lawful means that Kisler says must include giving the detainees a chance in court to contest the charges. Look, we have a saying in this country, it’s deeply embedded in who we are. Everybody deserves their day in court. And all of us want to know that if the government acts against us, we will at least have the opportunity to go to a neutral decision maker, present evidence and legal argument, and make sure that the government stays within its legal bounds. But does the day in court apply to immigrants? Absolutely. Nobody can be spirited out of the country without some opportunity to contest the factual and legal basis for that. And it turned out when the full facts were known, this Salvadoran man, Kilmar Abrego Garcia, had been deported by mistake. Normally, people deported in error are returned. But instead, Ruvanei says that in a phone call from a superior, he was ordered to argue against Abrego Garcia’s return by telling a judge that Abrago Garcia was an MS13 gang member and a terrorist. And I respond up the to up the chain of command, “No way. That is not correct. That is not factually correct. It is not legally correct. That is that is a lie. And I I cannot sign my name to that brief. You’re not saying Abrago Garcia is a choir boy. You’re just saying that no one had managed to prove that he was a terrorist. Here’s the really important thing here. Whether Mr. Garcia is or isn’t a member of MS-13 or a terrorist or anything else is besides the point. What matters here is that they did everything they did to him in violation of his due process rights. What’s to stop them if they decide they don’t like you anymore to say you’re a criminal, you’re a member of MS-13, you’re a terrorist? What’s to stop them from sending in some DOJ attorney at the direction of DOJ leadership to delay, to filibuster, and if necessary to lie, and now that’s you gone and your liberty changed. After refusing to sign the brief that called Abrego Garcia a terrorist, Ruvanei was fired. In June, he teamed up with lawyers from the Government Accountability Project to file a whistleblower disclosure. Making his story public helped expose a growing concern in many courts across the country that too often now the Justice Department is abusing the limits of the law. So, the judges um are saying some incredible things. Ryan Goodman is a law professor at New York University who heads a nonpartisan law journal. His team has analyzed hundreds of suits filed against the administration. And he didn’t imagine what judges were saying to the Trump Justice Department. We found over 35 cases in which the the judges have specifically said, “What the government is providing me is false information. It might be intentionally false information, including false sworn declarations time and again. In court records compiled by Goodman, Democratic and Republicanappointed judges are critical of the Trump Justice Department’s work. Highly misleading, said one judge. A serious violation of the court’s order, wrote another. and a third warned, trust that had been earned over generations has been lost in weeks. This isn’t the way things normally proceed. It’s not. Um, in fact, I would say for some of the cases that we’re looking at, maybe that would happen once every 10 years. Who gets hurt by this? The one entity or person or institution gets hurt the most is the Justice Department. We requested interviews with the head of the department, Attorney General Pam Bondi, her former deputy Amal Boi, and Drew Enson, the attorney who said he didn’t know when the planes were taking off, according to the court transcript. All declined the interview request. Boi was nominated for a judgeship, and in June, he was asked about Ruane’s claims. I have never advised a Department of Justice attorney to violate a court order. Boie said in part that Ravaney was in no position to tell his superiors what to do. There’s a suggestion that a a line attorney, not even the head of the Office of Limig immigration litigation, was in a position or considered himself to be to bind um the department’s leadership and other cabinet officials. Boie was also asked if he had dismissed the courts with an expletive. Well, did you suggest telling the court you in any manner? I don’t recall. Boie was confirmed for the judgeship and in a statement to 60 Minutes he wrote in part, “Mr. Ruain’s claims are a mix of falsehoods and wild distortions of reality.” Kilmar Abrego Garcia was returned to the US. He’s now charged with transporting illegal immigrants and he’s pled not guilty. A judge criticized the Justice Department’s poor attempts to connect him to MS-13 and he was not charged with terrorism. about those prisoners sent to El Salvador. They were released to their home country, Venezuela. And in April, the Supreme Court agreed unanimously that they had been entitled to their day in court. This interview is the first time that your face has been seen in such a public way, and I wonder if that concerns you. It does. At the same time, I think about what we’re losing in this moment. I think about why I went to the Department of Justice to do justice. And I took an oath to uphold and defend the Constitution. And my view of that oath is I need to speak up and draw attention to what has happened to the department, what is happening to the rule of law. I would not be faithfully abiding by my oath if I stayed silent right now.

Former Justice Department lawyer Erez Reuveni speaks out about the disregard of due process and for the rule of law that he says he witnessed in his final weeks at the Department of Justice.

#news #politics

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40 comments
  1. If more people vote for this to continue….the only conclusion I can arrive to….is that the majority is ignorant, people with
    Low mental capacity, filled with hate. Sad days

  2. Now that is a true American patriot. Thank you Mr. Reuveni. Trump's entire administration is corrupt and criminal. Especially the DOJ. This is what we are protesting against. No Kings= No Authoritarianism= No Dictator= No Tyranny. Uphold the Constitution!

  3. The corruption of the Trump regime is stunning. The speed at which our government has collapsed is staggering. It’s almost unbelievable…

  4. America is loosing the rule of Law. How many years this system was built and defended by many generations of Americans? All is destroyed in few months by those who forget what honor and dignity is . Then prepare to leave like in Russia. No laws respected, no laws are followed for regular citizens. The power of authorities is the rule and only the rule in Russia.

  5. These are all examples of high court shenanigans. The people need to remember that these things happen to regular people every day. DAs all over the country exist in a paradigm where locking people in cages equals career success, by any means necessary. The people need to get MAD, and demand sweeping legal reform at all levels. There is a reason why the ?land of the free: is per capita the largest incarcerated population to ever exist.

  6. This guy is exactly the "deep state" Trump is rooting out: principled career professionals who care about public service and the law

  7. No value to reveal this AFTER he got fired. Ty Cobb has been providing interviews against Trump forever even though Ty was Trump's attorney. These attorneys must STOP presenting this monster for their 5 minutes of fame, so he may stops acting like a dictator he is.

  8. Seeing how the Trump Administration is conducting themselves in their positions violating ALL court orders and laws, Mr Reuveni is very very believable , Pam Bondi, Kash Patel and all of the others are a HUGE disgrace in the DOJ but nothing is more disgraceful as the Supreme Court , the judges appointed by Trump…………No wonder the country has a lawless President, his administration, the House and Congress

  9. Trump showed Garcia's knuckles were tattooed with MS13 which CLEARLY showed in this picture they were lying.

  10. Mr Bove’s non verbal cues do not “lie” when he lies verbally.
    “I do not recall”….textbook sociopath. He will get fired by his boss one day. 😂

  11. Once people bend the knee and pledge loyalty to Donald they end up willing to do anything, maybe thinking everything will be on him, or that they would rather be corrupt and habitual liars and hurt people and the country over and over again rather than just go back on their word in one instance and not be little yes men anymore.

    Lock, them, up. And him. And take away the presidential pardon ability. The founders were worried about a demagogue but still gave the president the power to pardon??

  12. Watching this walking halls new York historical society in NYC so relevant today. Hear nyhs soon get collection Batman and Riddler comics can't wait. Maybe as good as exhibits on hamilton, Ben franklin, US Grant not that popular hear were giving away tickets this exhibit just literally giving it away. Visitor services so helpful so willing give public assistance received award decade service this dept. Was online read terrific reviews from jtllbpr (maybe nickname) hear really enjoyed themselves

  13. Almost one million views in less than 23 hours. We have all got to go out & vote November 2026 to get at least 67 Dem senators who can vote Grandpa Trmp out of office AFTER he is impeached.

  14. Trump does not care and neither does all.of his 'men' at the Justice Dept, the White House and the Supreme Court. They have been planning this for the better part of 10 years and we are all running to catch up. So you don't think they dont have the next 15 steps planned. We have very limited time to turn this around peacefully, if we even can.

  15. Did you just read his body language! WHEN HE SAID 'I don't remember. – He flat out lied!….Again. The look away, the evasive body language, the look in his eye and his micro expressions- He lied. Flat out.

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