A federal judge who keeps blocking President Trump’s immigration policies has a history of siding against law enforcement and going easy on January 6 rioters. Judge James Boasberg’s controversial decisions are raising eyebrows as Americans demand accountability for those who undermine border security.
Boasberg hit the spotlight again last week when he halted deportation flights targeting Venezuelan gang members. Critics say he’s using an old law in twisted ways to protect criminal aliens instead of American citizens. This isn’t the first time he’s stood in the way of Trump’s agenda. He previously helped deep-state holdovers by weakening FBI reforms after the Russia collusion hoax.
The judge’s soft spot for rioters is hard to ignore. While patriots rot in jail for walking through the Capitol, Boasberg gave Ray Epps – a man caught on tape urging crowds to storm the building – just probation. Epps became famous after Republicans exposed his suspiciously light treatment. Some wonder if certain players wanted him free to keep pushing fake “insurrection” narratives.
Deep-state connections run deep. Boasberg worked on the secret FISA court that illegally spied on Trump’s 2016 campaign. Even after FBI corruption was exposed, he let off a crooked lawyer who falsified evidence. This pattern of protecting the swamp explains why he’s now trying to shield illegal immigrants instead of enforcing our laws.
President Trump isn’t backing down. He’s calling for Boasberg’s impeachment, arguing activist judges can’t override the voters’ mandate. The Justice Department is fighting to remove him from the deportation case, saying he’s lost all credibility. Meanwhile, patriots in Congress are demanding answers about his questionable ties to Epps and other January 6 mysteries.
The drama escalated when Boasberg was assigned a new case about Trump officials using Signal messaging. Liberals claim they broke record-keeping rules, but conservatives see another witch hunt. With Biden holdovers still infesting the courts, every Trump policy faces sabotage from Obama-appointed judges like Boasberg.
This isn’t just about immigration. It’s about whether America remains a nation of laws. Boasberg’s rulings reward lawlessness – whether from violent mobs or drug cartels. His obsession with blocking Trump suggests politics, not justice, guides his decisions.
The Supreme Court may soon step in. Chief Justice Roberts shockingly defended Boasberg, but most Americans want judges who put citizens first. As the 2026 midterms approach, voters will remember which leaders fought to stop judicial tyranny and which caved to the radical left.