
South African woman given life sentence for trafficking six-year-old daughter
A South African woman and two accomplices were sentenced to life imprisonment on Thursday for trafficking her then-six-year-old daughter, in a case that has gained international attention since the child went missing last year.
Kelly Smith, her boyfriend Jacquen Appollis and their friend Steveno Van Rhyn were convicted of kidnapping and trafficking the girl, Joshlin Smith, after she disappeared from a small township in the Western Cape.
In a trial that shocked the country, a witness said Kelly Smith told her that she had sold her daughter to a sangoma, or traditional healer, for 20,000 rand (£830) and that the girl was desired for her 'eyes and skin'.
Joshlin has still not been found despite an extensive police search.
Announcing their sentences on Thursday, high court judge Nathan Erasmus said the fact Kelly Smith, Appollis and Van Rhyn were drug users was no excuse.
'There is nothing that I can find that is redeeming and deserving of a lesser sentence than the harshest I can impose,' Erasmus said.
For kidnapping, the three were given 10-year jail terms.
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BBC News
26 minutes ago
- BBC News
US brings Kilmar Ábrego García, mistakenly deported to El Salvador, back to face charges
Kilmar Ábrego García, a 29-year-old from El Salvador who was mistakenly deported in March, has been returned to the US to face prosecution on two federal criminal has been accused of participating in a trafficking conspiracy over several years to move people from Texas to other parts of the country. El Salvador agreed to release Mr Ábrego García after the US presented it with an arrest warrant, Attorney General Pam Bondi said on Friday. His lawyer has called the charges "preposterous".The White House had been resisting a US Supreme Court order from April to "facilitate" his return after he was sent to a mega-jail in El Salvador alongside more than 250 other deportees. In a two-count grand jury indictment, sealed by a Tennessee court last month, Mr Ábrego García was charged with one count of conspiracy to transport aliens and a second count of unlawful transportation of undocumented said the grand jury found that Mr Ábrego García had played a "significant role" in an alien smuggling ring - bringing in thousands of illegal immigrants to the indictment additionally alleges he transported members of MS-13, designated a foreign terrorist organisation by the US. The Trump administration had previously alleged Mr Ábrego García was a member of the transnational Salvadorian gang, which he has denied. Bondi also accused Mr Ábrego García of trafficking weapons and narcotics into the US for the gang. Mr Ábrego García's lawyers have previously argued that he has never been convicted of any criminal offence, including gang membership, in the US or in El Sandoval Moshenberg, one of his attorneys, called the charges "preposterous" and the events an "abuse of power" at a Friday news conference. Mr Ábrego García entered the US illegally as a teenager from El Salvador. In 2019, he was arrested with three other men in Maryland and detained by federal immigration an immigration judge granted him protection from deportation on the grounds that he might be at risk of persecution from local gangs in his home countryWhat is the 1798 law that Trump used to deport migrants?What we know about Kilmar Abrego Garcia and MS-13 allegationsOn 15 March, he was deported amid an immigration crackdown form the Trump administration, after President Donald Trump invoked the Alien Enemies Act, a war-time law that allows presidents to detain or deport the natives and citizens of an enemy Ábrego García was taken to the notorious mega-prison Cecot in El Salvador, known for its brutal conditions. While government lawyers initially said he was taken there as a result of "administrative error", the Trump administration refused to order his return. Whether or not the government had to "facilitate" his return to his home in the US state of Maryland became the subject of a weeks-long legal and political Maryland Senator Chris Van Hollen demanded to see Mr Ábrego García in El Salvador, he was released to a different prison in that country. El Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele, a close ally of Trump, said on social media on Friday that if the administration "request the return of a gang member to face charges, of course we wouldn't refuse". Mr Ábrego García is expected to make an initial appearance at a Tennessee court on Friday, where US will request he be held in pretrial custody "because he poses a danger to the community and a serious risk of flight", according to the detention motion.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Kilmar Ábrego García returned from El Salvador to face criminal charges in US
Kilmar Ábrego García, the man whom the Donald Trump administration mistakenly deported from Maryland to El Salvador in March, returned to the US on Friday to face criminal charges. In a press briefing Friday, the US attorney general, Pam Bondi, said that a federal grand jury in Tennessee had indicted the 29-year-old father on counts of illegally smuggling undocumented people as well as of conspiracy to commit that crime. 'Our government presented El Salvador with an arrest warrant and they agreed to return him to our country,' Bondi said of Ábrego García. She thanked Salvadoran president Nayib Bukele 'for agreeing to return him to our country to face these very serious charges'. 'This is what American justice looks like upon completion of his sentence,' Bondi added. In a statement to the Hill on Friday, Ábrego García's lawyer Simon Sandoval-Moshenberg accused the Trump administration of having 'disappeared' his client 'to a foreign prison in violation of a court order'. 'Now, after months of delay and secrecy, they're bringing him back, not to correct their error but to prosecute him,' he added. Sandoval-Moshenberg also said: 'This shows that they were playing games with the court all along. Due process means the chance to defend yourself before you're punished – not after.' Sandoval-Moshenberg said the White House's treatment of his client was 'an abuse of power, not justice'. He called on Ábrego García to face the same immigration judge who had previously granted him a federal protection order against deportation to El Salvador 'to ensure that his case is handled as it would have been had he not been improperly sent' there. That, Sandoval-Moshenberg argued, 'is the ordinary manner of doing things' – and he said that is what the US supreme court had ordered in April. Bondi on Friday maintained that federal grand jurors found that Ábrego García 'has played a significant role' in an abusive smuggling ring that had operated for nearly a decade. The attorney general added that if convicted, Ábrego García would be deported to El Salvador after completing his sentence in the US. Ábrego García entered the US without permission in about 2011 while fleeing gang violence in El Salvador. Despite the judicial order meant to prevent his deportation to El Salvador, on 15 March, US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) officials deported him to El Salvador after arresting him in Maryland. He was held in the so-called Center for Terrorism Confinement, a controversial mega-prison better known as Cecot. The Trump administration subsequently admitted that Ábrego García's deportation was an 'administration error'. But it has repeatedly cast him as a MS-13 gang member on television – a claim which his wife, a US citizen, and his attorneys staunchly refute. Ábrego García also had no criminal record in the US prior to the indictment announced Friday, according to court documents. On 4 April, federal judge Paula Xinis ordered the Trump administration to 'facilitate and effectuate' Ábrego García's return from El Salvador after his family filed a lawsuit in response to his deportation. The supreme court unanimously upheld Xinis's order a week later. In an unsigned decision, the court said that Xinis's decision 'properly requires the government to 'facilitate' Ábrego García's release from custody in El Salvador and to ensure that his case is handled as it would have been had he not been improperly sent to El Salvador'.


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Man mistakenly deported to El Salvador back in US to face charges
Update: Date: 21:17 BST Title: If convicted, Ábrego García will serve sentence in US - Bondi Content: A grand jury in Tennessee indicted Abrego Garcia on May 21, Bondi continues, and says "this investigation has been ongoing". The indictment decision came months after Ábrego García was deported in March. Todd Blanche, Donald Trump's former personal lawyer who is now with the Department of Justice, steps in to answer a question about Abrego Garcia's deportation and now return. He explains Abrego Garcia was brought back to the US because there is now an arrest warrant for him. Bondi says that Ábrego García will be prosecuted in the US. If convicted, he will serve his sentence in the US and then be returned to El Salvador. Update: Date: 21:14 BST Title: Bondi alleges he trafficked weapons, drugs into US Content: Bondi goes on to claim that Ábrego García trafficked weapons and narcotics into the US. She adds that a co-conspirator alleges he was involved in the murder of a rival gang member's mother. She does not provide evidence of these claims and he is not facing charges related to that allegation. 'These facts demonstrate Ábrego García is a danger to our community,' she says. Update: Date: 21:12 BST Title: Bondi alleges Ábrego García played 'significant role' in smuggling ring Content: Bondi continues to say that the grand jury found that Ábrego García had played a "significant role" in an alien smuggling ring. She says they found it was his "full time job" and alleges that he had made more than 100 trips smuggling people throughout the country - bringing in thousands of illegal immigrants to the US, Bondi says. Update: Date: 21:09 BST Title: Attorney General says Ábrego García will serve sentence in US if convicted Content: US Attorney General Pam Bondi thanks the President of El Salvador for helping return Ábrego García to the US. She then says after Ábrego García serves his sentence in the US - if convicted of any crimes - he will then return to El Salvador. Update: Date: 21:07 BST Title: Ábrego García has landed in the US, Attorney General announces Content: Kilmar Abrego Garcia has "landed in the United States to face justice", US Attorney General Pam Bondi says, beginning a news conference. He will be charged with "alien smuggling and conspiracy to commit alien smuggling" after a grand jury indictment, she says. Update: Date: 20:59 BST Title: Who is Kilmar Ábrego García? Content: Ábrego García, 29, came to the US from El Salvador illegally around 2011. In 2019, he was arrested with three other men in the US state of Maryland and detained by federal immigration authorities. A judge granted him protection from deportation on the grounds that he might be at risk of persecution from gangs in his home country. Ábrego García was living with his wife and child under this protected legal status in Maryland until he was deported on 15 March this year to El Salvador's notorious Cecot prison, in what the Trump administration admitted was an "administrative error". At the same time, the US government alleges he is a "verified" member of the violent El Salvador gang MS-13 - claims that his lawyer denies. Update: Date: 20:57 BST Title: Kilmar Ábrego García on way back to US, media reports Content: Kilmar Ábrego García - a 29-year-old from El Salvador who was deported from the US in March - is on his way back to the US, media reports. He is reportedly going to face criminal changes when he returns. Ábrego García faced a legal battle in the courts, which ultimately reached the US Supreme Court, over whether the US government should help "facilitate" his return to his home in Maryland. The White House, which accused him of being a member of the transnational Salvadorian gang MS-13, a designated foreign terrorist organisation has not yet confirmed his return. Stay with us as we bring you the latest.