politicsliberal
A Man's Fight to Return Home After a Wrongful Deportation
Maryland, Baltimore, USAFriday, April 11, 2025
Since then, Abrego Garcia has lived and worked legally in Maryland with no criminal record. In March, while driving home from work with his five-year-old son, he was stopped by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents. They arrested him, claiming his legal status had changed. His wife, an American citizen, rushed to the scene to prevent ICE from taking their child into custody.
A few days later, Abrego Garcia was sent to El Salvador on a flight with other men allegedly linked to the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua. He is now detained in a Salvadoran mega-prison, one of the most dangerous in the Western Hemisphere. The Salvadoran government receives $6 million from the U. S. to detain these deportees.
Abrego Garcia and his family are fighting his deportation, arguing it was unlawful given his protected status. The Justice Department even admitted it was a mistake. A federal district court judge ordered the administration to release Abrego Garcia from the Salvadoran prison and return him to the U. S. by a specific deadline. When the administration tried to pause this order, a three-judge panel unanimously declined, criticizing the government's actions.
The administration appealed to the Supreme Court, arguing that the lawyer who admitted the error does not speak for them. They also claimed they cannot force the Salvadoran government to release Abrego Garcia. However, the Supreme Court's recent ruling shows that the fight for Abrego Garcia's return is far from over.
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