logo
Wrongly deported Maryland resident returned to the US

Wrongly deported Maryland resident returned to the US

The Journal16 hours ago

THE SALVADORIAN MAN at the heart of a row over US President Donald Trump's hardline deportation policies has been returned to the US and arrested on human smuggling charges, officials said.
Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia has been returned to the US from El Salvador and immediately arrested on charges of trafficking undocumented migrants into the country, Attorney General Pam Bondi said.
'Abrego Garcia has landed in the United States to face justice,' Bondi said at a press conference.
The US Supreme Court had ordered the Trump administration to 'facilitate' the return of Abrego Garcia after he was
mistakenly deported in March to a notorious maximum security prison in El Salvador
.
Bondi insisted to reporters that his return to the US resulted from an arrest warrant presented to the Salvadoran authorities.
White House deputy press secretary Abigail Jackson said Abrego Garcia's return 'has nothing to do with his original deportation'. The US Government previously claimed that the man was deported in error, but later walked the comment back.
'There was no mistake,' Jackson said on X, adding that his return was on foot of a warrant issued for his arrest for alleged offences he committed during his time in the US.
Abrego Garcia, 29, was living in the state of Maryland until he became one of more than 200 people sent to a prison in El Salvador as part of Trump's crackdown on undocumented migrants.
Most of the migrants who were summarily deported were alleged members of the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua, which the Trump administration has declared a foreign terrorist organization.
'Administrative error'
Justice Department lawyers later admitted that Abrego Garcia – who is married to a US citizen – was wrongly deported due to an 'administrative error'.
Advertisement
Abrego Garcia had been living in the United States under protected legal status since 2019, when a judge ruled he should not be deported because he could be harmed in his home country.
The US alleges that Abrego Garcia 'played a significant role in an alien smuggling ring' and was a smuggler of 'children and women' as well as members of the Salvadoran gang MS-13.
Bondi alleged the man trafficked firearms and narcotics in the US 'on multiple occasions'. She added that Abrego Garcia, who was indicted by a grand jury in Tennessee, would be returned to El Salvador upon completion of any prison sentence.
Democratic Senator Chris Van Hollen, who visited Abrego Garcia in April at the prison where he was being held in El Salvador, welcomed his return to the United States.
'For months, the Trump Administration flouted the Supreme Court and our Constitution,' the senator from Maryland said. 'Today, they appear to have finally relented to our demands for compliance with court orders and with the due process rights afforded to everyone in the United States.'
'The Administration will now have to make its case in the court of law, as it should have all along.'
According to the indictment, Abrego Garcia was involved in smuggling undocumented migrants from Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras and other countries into the United States between 2016 and earlier this year.
-
© AFP 2025
Need more clarity and context on how migration is being discussed in Ireland? Check out our FactCheck Knowledge Bank for essential reads and guides to finding good information online.
Visit Knowledge Bank

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Man mistakenly deported to El Salvador brought back to US to face charges
Man mistakenly deported to El Salvador brought back to US to face charges

Irish Examiner

time7 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

Man mistakenly deported to El Salvador brought back to US to face charges

A man who was mistakenly deported to El Salvador has been returned to the United States to face criminal charges. Kilmar Abrego Garcia faces charges related to what US President Donald Trump's government said was a large human smuggling operation that brought immigrants into the country illegally. His abrupt release from El Salvador is the latest twist in a saga that sparked a months-long standoff between Trump administration officials and the courts over a deportation that officials initially acknowledged was done in error but then continued to stand behind in apparent defiance of orders by judges to facilitate his return to the US. The development occurred after US officials presented El Salvador President Nayib Bukele with an arrest warrant for federal charges in Tennessee accusing Abrego Garcia of playing a key role in smuggling immigrants into the country for money. He is expected to be prosecuted in the US and, if convicted, will be returned to his home country of El Salvador at the conclusion of the case, officials said. 'This is what American justice looks like,' US attorney general Pam Bondi said in announcing Abrego Garcia's return and the unsealing of a grand jury indictment. The indictment of Kilmar Abrego Garcia that charges him with transporting people who were in the United States illegally (AP Photo/Jon Elswick) Abrego Garcia's lawyers called the case 'baseless'. 'There's no way a jury is going to see the evidence and agree that this sheet metal worker is the leader of an international MS-13 smuggling conspiracy,' lawyer Simon Sandoval-Moshenberg said. Federal magistrate judge Barbara Holmes in Nashville, Tennessee, determined that Abrego Garcia will be held in custody until at least next Friday, when there will be an arraignment and detention hearing. Abrego Garcia appeared in court wearing a short-sleeved, white, buttoned shirt. When asked if he understood the charges, he told the judge through an interpreter: 'Yes. I understand.' Democrats and immigrant rights groups had pressed for Abrego Garcia's release, with several politicians – including senator Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, where Abrego Garcia had lived for years – even travelling to El Salvador to visit him. A federal judge had ordered him to be returned in April and the US Supreme Court rejected an emergency appeal by directing the government to work to bring him back. But the news that Abrego Garcia, who had an immigration court order preventing his deportation to his native country over fears he would face persecution from local gangs, was being brought back for the purpose of prosecution was greeted with dismay by his lawyers. The case also prompted the resignation of a top supervisor in the US attorney's office in Nashville, according to a person familiar with the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a personnel matter. Ben Schrader, who was chief of the office's criminal division, did not explain the reason for his resignation but posted to social media around the time the indictment was being handed down, saying: 'It has been an incredible privilege to serve as a prosecutor with the Department of Justice, where the only job description I've ever known is to do the right thing, in the right way, for the right reasons.' He declined to comment when reached by The Associated Press on Friday.

US resident returned from El Salvador to face migrant-smuggling charges
US resident returned from El Salvador to face migrant-smuggling charges

RTÉ News​

time8 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

US resident returned from El Salvador to face migrant-smuggling charges

A man who was mistakenly deported from the US state of Maryland to El Salvador by the Trump administration, has been returned to the US to face charges of transporting illegal immigrants. Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia was brought back to the United States from El Salvador and charged with trafficking undocumented migrants, Attorney General Pam Bondi said. Mr Abrego Garcia's return marked an inflection point in a case seized on by critics of President Donald Trump's immigration crackdown as a sign that the administration was disregarding civil liberties in its push to step up deportations. Mr Abrego Garcia - a 29-year-old Salvadoran whose wife and young child in Maryland are US citizens - appeared in federal court in Nashville yesterday evening. His arraignment was set for 13 June, when he will enter a plea, according to local media reports. Until then, he will remain in federal custody. If convicted, he would be deported to El Salvador after serving his sentence, Ms Bondi said. The Trump administration has said Mr Abrego Garcia was a member of the MS-13 gang, an accusation that his lawyers deny. Officials have portrayed the indictment of Mr Abrego Garcia by a federal grand jury in Tennessee as vindication of their approach to immigration enforcement. "The man has a horrible past, and I could see a decision being made, bring him back, show everybody how horrible this guy is," Mr Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One, adding that it was the Justice Department that decided to bring Mr Abrego Garcia back. According to the indictment, Mr Abrego Garcia worked with at least five co-conspirators as part of a smuggling ring to bring immigrants to the United States illegally, then transport them from the US-Mexico border to destinations in the country. Mr Abrego Garcia often picked up migrants in Houston, making more than 100 trips between Texas and Maryland between 2016 and 2025, the indictment alleges. It also accuses Mr Abrego Garcia of transporting firearms and drugs. According to the indictment, one of Mr Abrego Garcia's co-conspirators belonging to the same ring was involved in the transportation of migrants whose tractor trailer overturned in Mexico in 2021, resulting in 50 deaths. Mr Abrego Garcia's lawyer, Simon Sandoval-Moshenberg, called the criminal charges "fantastical" and a "kitchen sink" of allegations. "This is all based on the statements of individuals who are currently either facing prosecution or in federal prison," he said. "I want to know what they offered those people." The indictment also led to a high-level resignation in the federal prosecutor's office in Nashville, with news that Ben Schrader, chief of the criminal division for the Middle District of Tennessee, had resigned in protest. A 15-year veteran of the US Attorney's Office, Mr Schrader had grown increasingly uncomfortable with the administration's actions, and the indictment of Mr Abrego Garcia was "the final straw," a person familiar with the situation told Reuters. Mr Schrader declined to comment. Mr Schrader had posted notice of his resignation on LinkedIn last month, around the time the indictment was filed under seal, but he did not give a reason. Mr Abrego Garcia was deported on 15 March, more than two months before the charges were filed. He was briefly held in a mega-prison known as the Terrorism Confinement Center, despite a US immigration judge's 2019 order barring him from being sent to El Salvador because he would likely be persecuted by gangs. Ms Bondi said Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele had agreed to return Mr Abrego Garcia after US officials presented his government with an arrest warrant. "The grand jury found that over the past nine years, Abrego Garcia has played a significant role in an alien smuggling ring," she told a press conference. In a court filing yesterday, federal prosecutors asked a judge to keep Mr Abrego Garcia detained pending trial. Citing an unnamed co-conspirator, prosecutors said Mr Abrego Garcia joined MS-13 in El Salvador by murdering a rival gang member's mother. The indictment does not charge Mr Abrego Garcia with murder. Mr Abrego Garcia could face ten years in prison for each migrant he is convicted of transporting, prosecutors said, a punishment that potentially could keep him incarcerated for the rest of his life.

The Irish Independent's View: As Trump and Musk scrap, US voters could be hit by the fallout
The Irish Independent's View: As Trump and Musk scrap, US voters could be hit by the fallout

Irish Independent

time13 hours ago

  • Irish Independent

The Irish Independent's View: As Trump and Musk scrap, US voters could be hit by the fallout

Sceptics had long believed this union was more probably made in the darkest reaches of the nether world and would be happy to see it returned to its hottest corner. By their logic, no single universe could possibly contain two such colossal egos. Perhaps it is a back-handed compliment to Mr Musk that the ending of his 'First Buddy' status was celebrated with equal glee by the MAGA faithful and Democratic die-hards alike. What is clear is that when the planet's richest man falls out with its most powerful, there will be consequences. If Mr Musk thought the hundreds of millions he had given the president would spare him from his master's whims, he could not have been more wrong. In Trumpworld there can be only one emperor. The South African-born billionaire may have been cast into the void, but as owner of X — and Tesla, Space-X, Starlink and more — he makes for a dangerous adversary. The fallout from putting his nose out of joint could literally have been out of this world. 'In light of the president's statement about cancellation of my government contracts, SpaceX will begin decommissioning its Dragon spacecraft immediately,' Mr Musk said. Told that such a move would 'both end the International Space Station and simultaneously provide no way to safely de-orbit it', he rowed back. Mr Musk's conjuring up of the spectre of Jeffrey Epstein and the president's friendship with the convicted paedophile may yet be explosive Clearly, when two stars of the ultra-wealthy firmament collide, mere mortals need to be wary. The dispute could be destabilising, with far-reaching political and economic implications. Mr Musk's conjuring up of the spectre of Jeffrey Epstein and the president's friendship with the convicted paedophile may yet be explosive. US author Mark Twain understood the power of the press when he warned: 'Never quarrel with a man who buys ink by the barrel.' The advice is even more pertinent when it comes to tramping on the toes of a tech giant who also owns the planet's most influential media platform. Of course, the real concern is for the interests of voters who could be caught up in the havoc wreaked by such a titanic clash. ADVERTISEMENT The little guy rarely does well when the irresistible force meets the immoveable object; it did not take long for the mutual congratulations after the so-called 'Dogefather' stepped down to turn caustic. Mr Musk has told Republicans that Mr Trump will be gone in the next few years, while he will be strutting his stuff for the 'next 40'. The celebrity divorce has already reduced Mr Musk's estimated $388bn (€340bn) fortune by $36.6bn. It was his dismissal of Mr Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill' as an 'abomination' that caused the lightning storm. With US national debt at $36.22tn, someone needed to say something. The two billionaires will recover from their respect­ive sweet sorrows: the hope is that the parting will not prove too bitter for American taxpayers.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store