Kristi Noem PANICS After Jasmine Crockett EXPOSES Her In Explosive Hearing

Kristi Noem PANICS After Jasmine Crockett EXPOSES Her In Explosive Hearing

The Clash of Authority: Crockett vs. Noom

The March 5, 2026, hearing before the House Homeland Security Committee provided a stark illustration of the deepening divide between executive power and legislative oversight. Representative Jasmine Crockett’s questioning of Secretary Christy Noom was not a standard inquiry into departmental logistics; it was a blistering critique of the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) transparency and its adherence to the rule of law.

The exchange centered on three critical failures: the restriction of Congressional oversight, the deteriorating conditions within detention facilities, and a scathing judicial rebuke concerning the treatment of minors.

The “7-Day Rule” and the Obstruction of Oversight

Crockett began by challenging the Secretary on the legal right of members of Congress to enter detention facilities. Under federal law, particularly within appropriations riders, members are entitled to access these facilities for oversight purposes without prior permission.

The Conflict: Crockett alleged that the South Texas Family Residential Center (Dilly facility) required a seven-day notice for entry—a policy staff claimed originated directly from Secretary Noom.

The Defense: Secretary Noom pivoted to “safety and security” protocols, an answer Crockett rejected, noting that the lack of spontaneous oversight allowed for hidden crises, such as a measles outbreak she discovered only after a pre-announced visit.

Detention Deaths and the Dilly Reopening

The temperature of the hearing rose sharply when Crockett addressed the mortality rate within DHS custody. She directly accused Noom of presiding over a record-breaking number of detention deaths, calling the administration’s safety claims into question.

A point of particular contention was the reopening of the Dilly facility. While it had been closed during the previous administration, Noom confirmed it was reopened under her tenure in March 2025. Crockett framed this as a deliberate choice to expand a system that she argued is inherently “incompetently implemented.”

The “Law Degree” and the Liam Ramos Case

The most viral moment of the exchange occurred when Crockett brought up the case of Liam Ramos, a child held at the Dilly facility. A federal judge had ordered the child’s release, using the Declaration of Independence to characterize the government’s pursuit of “deportation quotas” as authoritarian.

The Rule of Law vs. Policy Discretion

Crockett’s line of questioning regarding Noom’s lack of a law degree was a strategic maneuver to highlight a perceived arrogance in the executive branch—specifically, the idea that a cabinet secretary can “disagree” with a standing court order to justify continuing a disputed policy. By framing the department’s actions as a violation of the foundational compact of the country, Crockett moved the debate from policy technicalities to constitutional integrity.

The hearing concluded with the submission of whistleblower records from the Washington Post and reports of FEMA’s slowed response to Texas floods due to Noom’s “cost controls,” further painting a picture of a department prioritizing optics and budgets over human outcomes.

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