Vice President Vance defended the Trump administration’s erroneous deportation of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a Salvadoran man with protected status, to El Salvador’s “Terrorism Confinement Center.” Vance argued that concern over the deportation should be secondary to the crimes committed by gang members against U.S. citizens. The administration, while admitting the mistake, contends that U.S. courts lack jurisdiction to intervene. Abrego Garcia’s deportation stemmed from a March 15th operation targeting alleged gang members, with the administration asserting that those deported were the “worst of the worst,” despite criticism of their methods for identifying gang affiliations. The administration maintains that Abrego Garcia’s past allegations of MS-13 involvement negate his protected status, though he was never convicted.
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The Trump administration mistakenly deported Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a Salvadoran man with protected status in the U.S., to a notorious El Salvadoran prison despite a court order halting deportations. The government admits the deportation was an administrative error but argues it cannot be compelled to return him, citing his lack of U.S. custody and inability to force El Salvador’s cooperation. This action occurred under the controversial invocation of the Alien Enemies Act, despite Abrego Garcia being neither Venezuelan nor having a criminal record in the U.S., and despite a judge having previously granted him protected status. The administration’s refusal to repatriate him raises serious questions about the legality and consequences of its actions.
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The Trump administration admitted to mistakenly deporting Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a Salvadoran man with protected legal status, to El Salvador’s “Terrorism Confinement Center.” This deportation, resulting from an “administrative error,” occurred despite ICE’s awareness of his protected status. The administration argues that U.S. courts lack jurisdiction to compel his return, claiming its foreign affairs primacy supersedes Abrego Garcia’s interests. Abrego Garcia’s attorney disputes this, asserting that such actions render immigration laws meaningless. The deportation followed a 2019 incident where Abrego Garcia was falsely linked to MS-13, despite lacking a criminal record.
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The Trump administration deported Neri Jose Alvarado Borges, a Venezuelan man with no criminal record, to El Salvador, despite a court order halting such deportations. ICE officials wrongly linked Alvarado Borges’s autism awareness tattoos to gang affiliation, justifying his expulsion. This incident is one of many where Venezuelan migrants, including Luis Carlos Jose Marcano Silva, were similarly deported based on misinterpretations of their tattoos. Families of the deportees assert their relatives are not criminals and were driven to the U.S. by economic hardship and political instability in Venezuela.
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