海角大神

海角大神 / Text

What happens if a judge charges the Trump administration with 鈥榗ontempt鈥?

What do a court鈥檚 contempt charges actually mean? If President Donald Trump and his administration are found guilty, consequences may be hard to enforce.

By Henry Gass, Staff writer

Described by Alexander Hamilton as the 鈥渨eakest鈥 and 鈥渓east dangerous鈥 branch of government, the federal judiciary has few ways it can enforce its authority.

One is the contempt power, which allows a federal judge to compel a party to follow a court order or punish them retrospectively for not following that order.

Amid mounting questions over the Trump administration鈥檚聽compliance with lower court orders, a federal judge in Washington, D.C., has initiated contempt proceedings against the government in an immigration case. An appeals court has since paused those proceedings, with the Department of Justice saying they raise troubling questions about the separation of powers and further a 鈥渃onstitutional collision.鈥

Meanwhile, a federal judge in a second immigration case is聽investigating the administration鈥檚 refusal to follow one of her orders. This could lead to more contempt proceedings.

What does 鈥榗ontempt of court鈥 mean?

There are two types of contempt proceedings: civil and criminal. In both, federal judges have broad discretion over when such contempt proceedings are needed, and broad latitude over how they unfold.

Civil contempt proceedings are typically initiated to compel a party to follow a court order in the future. Criminal contempt proceedings are used to punish a party for failure to comply with a past court order. The U.S. Marshals Service enforces federal contempt orders.

Punishments for disobeying contempt orders can range from fines to jail time, though incarceration is a rare and extreme recourse. Criminal contempt also comes with more procedural guardrails, as the consequences are likely graver, and the party being held in contempt usually can鈥檛 take action to avoid sanctions.

Thus, the contempt power is a high-stakes one. Federal courts need the power to ensure that parties take court cases seriously, but contempt proceedings also give judges a potentially dangerous amount of unilateral power, retired federal judges Nancy Gertner and Mark Bennett聽wrote in 2020.

鈥淭he U.S. Supreme Court has repeatedly emphasized that courts must be extremely careful in exercising the contempt power,鈥 they added.

鈥淲ithout the exercise of due care, one judge could be playing the role of prosecutor, judge, and jury in the same case 鈥 something that would put due process of law at grave risk.鈥

Has the federal government been held in contempt before?

Federal agencies and officials have been held in contempt in the past, but typically for civil contempt.

In 2019, a federal judge found Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos in contempt for violating an order to stop collecting on loans from students defrauded by a now-defunct for-profit college.

In 2011, a federal judge held the Interior Department in contempt for ignoring his order to scrap a moratorium on offshore oil drilling after the Deepwater Horizon oil rig explosion.

Two Interior Department secretaries, under the Clinton and George W. Bush administrations, were held in contempt聽in a case concerning government payments owed to a group of Native Americans.聽A federal judge held the Environmental Protection Agency in contempt for destroying computer files ahead of the 2001 presidential transition.

Contempt charges rarely make their way all the way to the Supreme Court, especially in cases involving the president. Indeed, a sitting president has never been held in contempt of court, and courts 鈥 particularly higher courts 鈥 have historically been reluctant to allow contempt sanctions against the federal government, according to an聽in-depth 2018 review from Yale Law School Professor Nicholas Parrillo.

Why are contempt proceedings so sensitive?

Contempt proceedings against the federal government inherently raise questions about the balance of powers. If the judicial branch can somehow force the executive branch to follow its orders, lawful or not, the branches aren鈥檛 coequal. But if the executive is free to ignore court orders it doesn鈥檛 like, the branches aren鈥檛 coequal, either.

There are due process concerns as well. In a typical court case, the judge is a neutral arbiter who referees a dispute between a plaintiff and a defendant and then either reaches a decision or instructs a jury. But the contempt power significantly shakes up that balance of power.

A federal judge is the sole decider of when contempt of court has occurred, although there are thresholds that must be met for a court to make that finding. The judge then determines how the contempt can be avoided and what, if it can鈥檛 be avoided, the sanctions will be. Contempt findings can be appealed, and as Professor Parrillo found, appeals are often successful.

Muddying things further, in the (likely) event the president鈥檚 Justice Department won鈥檛 prosecute a contempt case against the executive branch, outside prosecutors must be deputized in their stead. And if a federal court does find a party in contempt, will the U.S. Marshals Service 鈥 an executive branch agency also tasked with protecting federal judges 鈥 follow a court order to jail a federal official?

Federal courts should thus be extremely selective in when they use the contempt power, wrote Judges Gertner and Bennett.

Criminal contempt in particular, they added, 鈥渟hould be reserved only for acts so grave and abhorrent that they amount to an offense not just against the presiding judge, but one that has potential for undermining public confidence in the authority and dignity of our courts.鈥

What does this mean for what鈥檚 happening now?

Criminal contempt proceedings against the federal government are underway now in a Washington, D.C. immigration case 鈥 and the federal government is fighting back.

Judge James Boasberg ruled this month that the Trump administration showed 鈥渨illful disregard鈥 for his order on March 15 pausing deportations under the 1798 Alien Enemies Act. Despite Judge Boasberg鈥檚 order temporarily pausing such removals, over 250 Venezuelan men were flown to an El Salvador prison that day.

The Supreme Court stayed that order, a move that would usually trigger a winding down of the case. Instead, Judge Boasberg ruled that 鈥減robable cause exists鈥 to hold the government in criminal contempt.

鈥淭he Court does not reach such conclusion lightly or hastily,鈥 he聽wrote. 鈥淭he Constitution does not tolerate willful disobedience of judicial orders 鈥 especially by officials of a coordinate branch who have sworn an oath to uphold it.鈥

The government appealed to the federal appeals court in Washington, D.C., and a panel of appellate judges has聽stayed the contempt proceedings pending further court order. In聽its appeal, the DOJ accused Judge Boasberg of 鈥渘eedlessly prompting a constitutional confrontation.鈥

鈥淧rosecuting criminal contempt is a task exclusively for the Executive Branch,鈥 the government argues. 鈥淒istrict courts cannot outsource prosecutorial power to private citizens, insulate them from Executive Branch control, and then unleash them against the Executive Branch.鈥

That final argument carries some weight, including for legal scholars who think Judge Boasberg鈥檚 contempt proceedings against the government are justified.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not hard to imagine other federal judges abusing this authority,鈥 wrote Steve Vladeck, a Georgetown University Law Center professor, in a聽blog post聽this month.

鈥淚 sympathize, deeply, with the idea that the government鈥檚 behavior in [Judge Boasberg鈥檚 case] demands a remedy,鈥 he added. But 鈥渨e should be wary of giving even the most principled and responsible federal judges [that] power.鈥