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Inspired by recent events, I am wondering what would happen if a court makes a clear ruling (say, that border officials must not turn back refugees) and if CBP explicitly refuses to comply.

(I say "clearly" and "explicitly" because the point of this question is not to worry about cases where the ruling or non-compliance is unclear.)

Can/would they send US Marshals to compel or arrest CBP officers to let in people at the border, for example? What if the officers are ordered not to comply? How could it realistically play out?

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    If a senior manager orders staff not to comply with a court order, he is directly in contempt of court, and could be sent to jail without a hearing. What the court would do we can only speculate on. Commented Jan 29, 2017 at 15:03
  • @TimLymington: Do you mean there is no precedent for anything like this to give us any potential ideas of what might happen?
    – user541686
    Commented Jan 29, 2017 at 22:41
  • @K-C: I think you're describing how the court would punish the people in charge, whereas I'm asking how the order itself would be enforced. If US Marshals send the people-in-charge to jail, that still wouldn't help the poor souls stuck at the border. Are you saying there's nothing that the courts can do in that regard?
    – user541686
    Commented Jan 29, 2017 at 22:43
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    I want to point out that there's a vast difference between top-down refusal by high officials of CBP, and failure especially immediately after a ruling is made, for bottom-level officers to not comply because they not have conflicting orders and cannot know if the judge's order legally applies to them.
    – user6726
    Commented Jan 30, 2017 at 1:20
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    Yeah, that's the difference between can and will.
    – user6726
    Commented Jan 30, 2017 at 3:05

2 Answers 2

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@Dale M is basically correct, but fudges a bit on the process.

The court issuing the order would issue an order to show cause to a government official who is alleged by the person who sought the order to have violated the order after having received legal notice (i.e. service) of the order.

If that individual fails to appear at the appointed time and place in the order to show cause, a warrant issues for that individual's arrest. If that individual does appear, the allegedly contemptuous individual is read their rights and a hearing date is set.

At the hearing, if the person appears, the person seeking the contempt finding (or some other attorney appointed by the court) prosecutes the case and if the person is found in contempt, then contempt sanctions issue. If they do not appear, a warrant issues for their arrest and a hearing is held on the merits promptly following that arrest.

An individual can also be ordered to show cause in an official capacity in which case the contempt sanctions would be imposed against the organization rather than the individual.

Usually, in federal court, the U.S. Marshal's office has primary responsibility for arresting people on contempt warrants. The U.S. Marshal's office primarily reports to the judicial branch, although strictly speaking, it is part of the Justice Department, and ultimately reports to the Attorney-General.

There are actually two kinds of contempt - remedial and punitive. Remedial contempt sanction can include indefinite incarceration or a fine (often a per day fine) until the violation of the order of the court ceases and is allowed only when it is possible to comply with the order going forward. Punitive contempt has a sanction comparable to a misdemeanor conviction and applies in cases where the goal is to punish someone for a past violation of a court order whether or not it is possible to comply going forward.

(Both of these are examples of "indirect contempt", i.e. violations of court orders that take place outside the courtroom. A different summary process called "direct contempt" applies when someone misbehaves in the presence of the court - this is summary incarceration or fine without a trial on the spot for disrespecting the dignity of the court in the courtroom.)

Established practice is to direct a contempt order at the lowest level official necessary to remedy the violation of the order. There are a few examples in living memory of cabinet members being held in contempt, however (e.g. the Secretary of Interior, with regard to Indian Trust fund litigation), and keep in mind that in the case of remedial contempt an official can purge the contempt and be released from any sanction by resigning from office, after which the official no longer has the ability to comply.

I am not aware of any instance in which the President of the United States has personally been held in contempt of court, but I am also not aware of any authority that specifically prohibits a court from holding the President in contempt of court.

While contempt is the only "hard" remedy for a violation of a court order, the bureaucratic structure of the federal government is also set up in a manner that once a court order definitively resolves a legal issue, the higher ups in a federal agency are supposed to take all reasonable actions to insure that their subordinates follow that order (and they are themselves subject to contempt sanctions if they fail to do so). And, keep in mind that most of the people in the chain of command are civil servants with legal protections from unlawful employment actions hired on a merit basis, not political appointees, and that lots of the people in the chain of command are also members of unions that provide individual employees with the ability to fight wrongful employment action from a superior for violating a court order.

In particular, the top lawyers in the executive branch would in ordinary times direct government employees to follow a clear court order and to cease and desist from explicitly disobeying one. Among other things, the courts could probably deny lawyers who refused to do so the right to practice law in federal court. But, usually things never reach this point. Then again, we are living in interesting times.

There are about 670 political appointee positions in the executive branch, many of which are currently vacant and less than a dozen of which would be relevant to any given dispute in any case. There are about a million, civilian, non-defense department, non-postal service employees in the United States government, of which perhaps 100,000 or so are in the Department of Homeland Security and fewer are in the CBP. As far as I know, the CBP political appointees from the Obama administration have resigned and a replacement has not been confirmed by the U.S. Senate yet (there has been a Department of Homeland Security appointee confirmed if I recall correctly), and there are only a few people in the agency that political appointees can hire without either receiving Senate confirmation or using the merit based hiring process for civil servants (which takes a while, especially given an executive order imposing a hiring freeze). So, realistically, we have a case where the acting head of the CBP is probably a GS-15 or Senior Executive Service grade civil servant, rather than a political appointee, at the moment, who was hired as a civil servant many years ago, who is doing his (or her) best to follow the less than clear guidance he is receiving from his superiors and government lawyers (perhaps errantly).

There could also be remedies in the form of declaratory judgment. The Court could declare as a matter of law on a case by case basis that, for example, Fatima Jones is not deportable and is lawfully within the United States and is entitled to be released from custody. This specific finding as to an individual would be very hard for the administration to escape sanction for.

And, the Court could also declare that the entire executive order, at least as applied, is invalid (e.g. for failure to comply with the administrative procedures act, or for failing to include an exception for contrary court orders) or is unconstitutional.

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  • Could the executive direct the Justice Department to order the U.S. Marshal's office to not enforce the contempt of court orders? Presumably such a directive would be unconstitutional?
    – Dan Bryant
    Commented Feb 8, 2017 at 19:00
  • Such a directive would clearly be illegal. It isn't obvious whether this would because it is truly unconstitutional per se, or if instead (or in addition) it is illegal because it is a violation of some law other than the constitution. At some point, defiance of court orders gives rise to a constitutional crisis.
    – ohwilleke
    Commented Feb 8, 2017 at 21:22
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    A nice empirical scholarly work on enforcement of court orders against defiant government defendants is discussed at: marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2017/02/…
    – ohwilleke
    Commented Feb 9, 2017 at 19:52
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    If I'm reading that correctly, it sounds like, in practice, the check against misbehaving civil officials is primarily censure (or the threat thereof), as attempts at sanctions don't tend to stick. There is a strong reliance on traditional norms to keep public officials in check. I find this somewhat worrisome, since if a shameless rogue agent makes its way into the system, willing to act in defiance of those norms... I should probably do some reading on the meaning of constitutional crisis.
    – Dan Bryant
    Commented Feb 9, 2017 at 21:35
  • "I should probably do some reading on the meaning of constitutional crisis." Good idea. I think that this is quite likely to come up under the current administration.
    – ohwilleke
    Commented Feb 9, 2017 at 21:51
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The normal course of events for a person who defies a court order is that the court would issue a warrant for their arrest for contempt. This warrant would then be executed by the relevant law enforcement agency (US Marshals, FBI, local police, whatever) and the person would be placed in jail until they agreed to comply with the order.

In the case of an organisation that was refusing to comply, arrest warrants could be issued against each person who was not complying until someone decided that they would comply.

In practice, a government agency would either immediately comply with the order or lodge an application for injunctive relief from it in a higher court.

Of course, if everybody refuses to comply with a court order you have what is known as a breakdown of law and order and things get really, really bad e.g. Syria.

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  • If a CBP officer fails to obey the court order, would the contempt warrant be issued against that officer, or against the head of the CBP in his official capacity? Would the court issue a contempt warrant against the president?
    – phoog
    Commented Jan 30, 2017 at 2:07
  • @phoog depends what the particular order says i.e. who is required to do (or not do) whatever is required to be done (or not done). Whoever that is - that's the guy that's in contempt. I do not believe that a court could require a President to rescind an executive order - that can just make it of no legal effect.
    – Dale M
    Commented Jan 30, 2017 at 2:10
  • Right, the courts can -- and have -- ordered the president and the head of CBP (IIRC) to refrain from deporting people solely on the basis of the executive order. If people continue to be deported, in defiance of the order, who gets arrested?
    – phoog
    Commented Jan 30, 2017 at 2:26
  • @phoog whoever deports them
    – Dale M
    Commented Jan 30, 2017 at 2:27
  • I have now seen one news story (from a website I haven't seen before, seeking a more reputable confirm) stating "the Court directs service of this Order upon the United States Marshal for the Eastern District of New York, and further directs the United States Marshal Service to take those actions deemed necessary to enforce the provisions and prohibitions set forth in this Order."
    – user662852
    Commented Jan 30, 2017 at 4:49

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