Trump says 'disgraceful' that Obama-appointed Judge Boasberg will be presiding over Signal lawsuit

Boasberg was appointed by former President Barack Obama and is also presiding over a case involving whether or not the Trump administration has the right to deport illegal migrants under the Alien Enemies Act.

Published: March 27, 2025 10:31am

Updated: March 27, 2025 10:40am

President Donald Trump on Thursday criticized Judge James Boasberg for having been assigned another important case regarding him and his administration – this one for a lawsuit brought against top officials over a journalist accidentally being included in their group chat about a planned Houthi air strike.

Boasberg, who serves on the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia and was appointed to the bench by President Barack Obama, and is also presiding over a case on whether the administration has the authority to deport illegal migrants under the Alien Enemies Act. (An appeals court on Wednesday denied a request to overturn his ruling early this month to temporarily halt the deport effort.)

"How disgraceful is it that “Judge” James Boasberg has just been given a fourth “Trump Case,” something which is, statistically, IMPOSSIBLE," he wrote on TRUTH Social. "There is no way for a Republican, especially a TRUMP REPUBLICAN, to win before him."

He said Boasberg had massive "Trump derangement syndrome."

The watchdog group American Oversight filed a group chat lawsuit against Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, CIA Director John Ratcliffe, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and the National Archives and Records Administration.

"Plaintiff American Oversight brings this action … to prevent the unlawful destruction of federal records and to compel Defendants to fulfill their legal obligations to preserve and recover federal records created through unauthorized use of Signal for sensitive national security decision-making," the lawsuit reads.

Trump’s senior national security officials accidentally shared sensitive details about strike plans on the Houthi  group in Yemen with editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg through the encrypted messaging app Signal.

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