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Trump administrator accidentally sent his father in Maryland to a large El Salvador jail and said it couldn't get him back

The Trump administration accidentally sent El Salvadorian immigrants to the notorious El Salvadorian prison and said there was nothing we could do about it.

That was the man who protected the immigration status of the United States, especially being sent back to that country for fear of persecution.

In a filing in a Maryland federal court on Monday, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) admitted to mistakenly sending Kilman Armando Abreg Garcia to the infamous and cruel Cecot prison in El Salvador.

“On March 15th, although ICE realized it was protected from the evacuation of El Salvador, Abrego Garcia was removed from office to El Salvador due to administrative errors,” the government wrote.

The lawsuit for admission comes from the family of Abrego Garcia, who is seeking a court order prohibiting the United States from paying the man's detention to El Salvador and asking the federal government to ask the country to return him to the United States.

The Trump administration argues that the U.S. court lacks jurisdiction over its detention and release orders because the person is no longer detained in the U.S.

The United States claims that it cannot seek human freedom because it no longer has custody of him (AP) because

Abrego Garcia, who settled in Maryland from El Salvador around 2011, fled his native country’s gang, allegedly sneaking in his homeland, assaulting and threatening to kill and kidnap him as part of a blackmail effort, court documents show.

In 2019, he was notified of the dismissal process, and ICE accused him of being a member of the El Salvador criminal gang MS-13.

His attorneys believe he has no criminal record, is associated with the gang or is associated with any criminal group. They claimed the allegations were arrested by the vulnerable gang, when he was targeted by police more than he was working outside his home warehouse in Chicago Bull brand clothing. (ICE insisted that confidential informants told the agency that the man was a member of MS-13.)

During the dismissal process, Abrego Garcia applied for asylum and protection under the United Nations Convention, and the judge allowed him to refuse to dismiss. The government did not appeal the decision.

According to court documents, the Maryland man is a union metal work apprentice who is a 5-year-old father who stays in the United States and continues to sign with ice regularly.

“Instead, the government flew Mr. Abreg Garcia to El Salvador by plane, without any legal basis,” his lawyer wrote in a lawsuit filed on Friday. “Once entering El Salvador, the government immediately placed Mr. Abreg Garcia in the center of torture – the U.S. government is reportedly paying the El Salvador government. Without law, this weird performance of power makes our entire judicial system annoying and cannot be allowed to stand.”

independent The Department of Homeland Security and the White House have been contacted for comment.

On Wednesday, March 12, Abrego Garcia was sent to El Salvador on Saturday when he learned of a change in his immigration status.

Cecot is the same facility, known by some human rights groups as Tropical Gulag, and the Trump administration sends hundreds of Venezuelans allegedly members of the Tren de Aragua gang, using emergency powers in the Wartime Alien Act to remove a man who has not been litigated in all court proceedings.

As part of the operation, several of the hundreds who were expelled from the country this month appeared to be deported for possessing tattoos with relatively common patterns, including the Jordan logo in the air, the crown, the stars and the rainbow autism consciousness symbol.

The government acknowledged that “many” of the more than 200 Venezuelans sent to El Salvador have no previous criminal records.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio admitted on Thursday that the Venezuelans are not necessarily members of Tren de Aragua. He called the group a “combination of people” whose existence is “not productive to the United States” and “movable” under the law.

The dispute over deportation has further intensified, and despite a court order filed a lawsuit, the Trump administration conducted flights on March 15 in a lawsuit against the White House using wartime deportation laws.

On Friday, the Trump administration asked the Supreme Court to weigh and allow them to resume such flights, believing that the president's national security power is being wrongly violated.

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