Live from NPR News in Washington on Corva Coleman,
a federal judge in Maryland is asking whether government officials are acting in,
quote, bad faith in the case of a migrant wrongly deported to El Salvador.
Judge Palazzini is now calling for two weeks of a sped-up process to learn what the federal government is doing to try to bring back Kielmer-Obrego Garcia.
The judge says she may question government officials under oath.
Abrego Garcia's wife, Jennifer Vazquez-Sura, has a message for her husband.
The Trump administration maintains that Abrego Garcia is a gang member but has never revealed evidence of this.
His lawyers deny it.
President Trump met El Salvador's president this week at the White House.
Trump did not ask for Abrego Garcia's return.
The Salvadoran president says he's not going to release him anyway.
The Trump administration and Harvard University are clashing over billions of dollars in federal funding.
But college educators are expressing relief that Harvard is defying the Trump administration's policy demands.
NPR's Janaki Mehta explains.
Harvard has become the first university to formally reject the Trump administration's demands that it drastically change its admissions,
hiring, and other policies in order to get federal money, primarily used for research.
Now the Trump administration has frozen over $2.2 billion in funding for the university and threatened to remove its tax-exempt status.
Here's Ted Mitchell, president of the American Council on Education, which represents hundreds of colleges.
If Harvard hadn't stood up,
it would have sent a chill across higher education that would have hampered the ability of other institutions to define for themselves where