02/04/2025
02/04/2025

WASHINGTON, April 2, (AP): US President Donald Trump’ s administration has acknowledged mistakenly deporting a Maryland man with protected legal status to a notorious El Salvador prison last month, but is arguing against returning him to the United States because of his alleged gang ties and the US government's lack of power over the Central American nation. Lawyers for Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia, 29, maintain he is not affiliated with MS-13 or any other street gang and argue the US government "has never produced an iota of evidence” that he does.
Abrego Garcia was arrested in Baltimore on March 12 after working a shift as a sheet metal apprentice in Baltimore and picking up his 5-year-old son, who has autism and other disabilities, from his grandmother’s house, his lawyers' complaint stated. Abrego Garcia was then sent to the Terrorism Confinement Center, or CECOT, which activists say is rife with abuses and where inmates are packed into cells and never allowed outside.
Abrego Garcia’s wife later saw him in photos and video from the prison, identifying her husband through his distinctive tattoos and two scars on his head. US Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials admitted in a court filing on Monday to an "administrative error” in deporting him. The government’s acknowledgment sparked immediate uproar from immigration advocates while prompting Vice President JD Vance and other administration officials to repeat the allegation that he’s a gang member.
Abrego Garcia came to the US illegally from El Salvador around 2011, "fleeing gang violence,” according to his lawyers, and made his way to Maryland to join his older brother, a US citizen. "Beginning around 2006, gang members had stalked, hit, and threatened to kidnap and kill him in order to coerce his parents to succumb to their increasing demands for extortion,” the complaint states of his life in his native country. Abrego Garcia later married a US citizen and worked in construction to support her, their son and her two children from a previous relationship.
The allegations about his affiliation with MS-13 stem from a 2019 arrest outside a Maryland Home Depot store, where he and other young men were looking for work, according to the complaint. County police asked if he was a gang member and demanded information about other gang members. After explaining that he wasn't a gang member and had no information, he was turned over to ICE.
ICE argued against Abrego Garcia's release at a subsequent immigration court hearing because local police had "verified” his gang membership, the complaint said. The evidence they cited included his wearing of a Chicago Bulls hat and hoodie and a confidential informant's claim that Abrego Garcia belonged to MS-13's "Westerns clique” in Long Island, New York, despite having never lived there.