If doing it by the books does not delay deportation by much, it is even weirder to defend it.
If the government can ignore judges rulings without penalty, then rule of law is dead. You do not seem to care, but you really should.
What was Lincoln's penalty in Ex Parte Merryman? A stern look of disdain etched onto Taney's bust mounted in the capitol?
The government acknowledges it made a mistake in violating a court order it didn't know about, and had no reason to suspect existed because its utterly nanners
The lower court here completely shredded the constitution by trying to enforce an order that would violate the separation of powers and sovereignty of the executive, and the only statutorily provided relief was for the supreme court to sit on the judge's chest and whack him in the face a few times.
Pray tell what should be a court's penalty for violating the constitution? In a functional government with the rule of law, we just adjudicate these disputes and arrive at a sensible conclusion rather than being vindictive and punishing those involved but maybe we need to erect gibbets