The judge’s ruling didn’t just shake immigration law. It shook her own courtroom.
A Biden‑appointed federal judge just blocked Trump’s mass deportation machine — while her husband quietly profits from
the very immigrant housing market her order protects. Now accusations of corruption, deleted videos, and explosive conflict‑of‑interest claims are tearing through California’s Central Val… Continues…
Judge Jennifer L. Thurston’s injunction did more than rein in Border Patrol; it ignited a firestorm over judicial ethics.
Her order bars warrantless arrests of suspected undocumented
immigrants across parts of California, including Kern County,
where her husband, Marc A. Thurston, brokers multifamily
housing heavily occupied by immigrant tenants.
His now‑deleted Instagram videos, highlighted by Laura Loomer,
warned that Trump‑era deportations would devastate local rentals and his own business, directly tying immigration enforcement to his bottom line.
Those public statements, combined with the financial stakes,
fuel arguments that Judge Thurston should have stepped aside under 28 U.S.C. § 455,
which demands recusal when a spouse’s financial interests could be
affected or when impartiality might reasonably be questioned.
Supporters frame her ruling as a constitutional safeguard after
“Operation Return to Sender.” Critics see something darker:
a federal judge whose household prosperity appears
intertwined with the very policies she just constrained.