Trump Ice official admits

Trump Ice official admits

By

Jacob Rosen

Department of Justice reporter

Jake Rosen is a reporter covered by the Department of Justice. He was previously a digital campaign reporter who covered President Trump’s 2024 campaign and also served as an associate producer of “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan”, where he worked with Brennan for two years in the transmission. Rosen has been the producer of several News themezone podcasts, including “The Takesout”, “The Debrief” and “Agent of Betrayal: The Double Life of Robert Hanssen.”

Read complete biography

/ News themezone

The lawyer says that the man deported by mistake is not in a gang

Trump Ice official admits

The man deported to El Salvador “is not a member of a gang,” says the lawyer 04:39

The Trump administration admitted in a presentation of a court on Monday that an “administrative error” and a “supervision” resulted in the deportation and imprisonment of a savior man

The director of the Immigration Field and Customs Control of Function Deportation flights That sent hundreds of alleged gang members to a notorious prison in El Salvador, despite an immigration judge had granted legal protection of deportation.

Those flights are in the center of a Judicial battle Between the Department of Justice and the judge of the United States District Court, James Boasberg, who blocked new deportations of alleged members of the Aragua Train Gang under the invocation of the Trump administration of the Trump of the 1798 alien enemies law.

Deportation flights of March 15 Transported 238 Venezuelans and 23 Salvadoransall of which Trump administration officials described as members of the train gangs of Aragua and MS-13. The lawyers and relatives of many of Venezuelans have strongly denied the claims that their clients and loved ones are gang members.

The presentations were made as part of a lawsuit filed by lawyers of Abrego García, a savior man Maryland resident Who received a legal status known as “retention of the elimination” in 2019 after an immigration judge discovered that Abrego García, who left his native country in 2011 at age 16, could face the persecution by the gangs if he was deported to El Salvador. His case was first reported by Atlantic on Monday night.

Although the Trump administration acknowledges that it made an error when it deported Abrego García, he opposes a request to bring him back to the United States, the Government has argued that Abrego García is a danger to the community, claiming that he is a member of the MS-13 gang.

The Department of Justice has also argued that federal courts lack the authority to facilitate the return of Abrego García, since he is now being held by the Salvadoran government and is no longer in custody of the United States. Even if they had the power to order their return, the Department of Justice said in a presentation, “it has not shown that El Salvador is inclined to consider a request to free a detainee at the request of the United States.”

The lawyer Simon Sandoval-Mosheberg called the Trump administration’s refusal to try to recover his “frightening” client.

“I have had unfair deportation cases before, even in the last Trump administration and in each case of this case, as soon as they realize what they have done, they folded upside down,” he told News themezone.

Abrego García lived in Maryland, along with his wife and his 5 -year -old disabled son, who are US citizens, according to the judicial documents presented by his lawyers. Before being arrested by ICE last month, Abrego García routinely attended records with the agency, according to the presentations. His lawyers said he has no criminal record in the United States, a finding that the government has not played.

In 2019, Abrego García was standing out of a home in Hyattsville, Maryland, requesting work with three other men when he was arrested. His lawyer said he was asked if he was a member of the gang, and when he told the police that he was not, the police said they did not believe him and said they called ICE.

During the immigration procedures, Abrego García’s lawyers said that the only evidence that the Government provided in support of the affiliation of its gang was that it wore a Chicago Bulls hat and a hooded sweatshirt and that a confidential informant of MS-13 vivid.

“He is not a member of a gang. The accusations against him are based on whispers and shadows,” said Sandoval-Mosheberg.

Abrego García’s lawyers wrote in their initial complaint that the name of their client was not included in a report from the Police Department of the city of Hyattsville about the arrest of Home Depot, and said that the detective who was the author of the affiliation of the gang starts from the report had been suspended.

An immigration judge ruled that the informant’s testimony was “proven and reliable”, but said he should not be deported to El Salvador.

In a statement on Tuesday, a spokesman for the National Security Department said that Abrego García is “a member of the brutal MS-13 gang and, according to the reports, he was involved in trafficking in persons. Whether he is in El Salvador or in a detention center in the United States, he should be locked up.”

Vice President JD Vance responded to the media reports on deportation on Tuesday, publishing in X that “it is revealing that all US media will direct a propaganda operation today, which makes you think that an innocent ‘father of 3’ was arrested by a gulag,” and added that Abrego García “is an illegal immigrant without the right to be in our country.”

Nicole Sganga contributed to this report.

  • USA
  • Kilmar Abrego Garcia
  • Deportation
  • Trump administration
  • El Salvador

Jacob Rosen

Jake Rosen is a reporter covered by the Department of Justice. He was previously a digital campaign reporter who covered President Trump’s 2024 campaign and also served as an associate producer of “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan”, where he worked with Brennan for two years in the transmission. Rosen has been the producer of several News themezone podcasts, including “The Takesout”, “The Debrief” and “Agent of Betrayal: The Double Life of Robert Hanssen.”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *