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Thursday, May 1, 2025

Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia, Part 2

What are the separate allegations against him?

Two other allegations have surfaced since Mr Albrego Garcia was deported.

In 2021, his wife, Jennifer Vasquez Sura, filed a protective order petition against him, alleging that he had physically attacked her on multiple occasions, according to documents shared by the US Department of Homeland Security.

Ms Vasquez Sura later said in a statement on 16 April that she had decided not to follow through with the court process at the time and that she and her husband "were able to work through this situation privately as a family, including by going to counseling".

She described her husband as "a loving partner and father" and has repeatedly denied he is an MS-13 gang member.

On 15 April, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt also accused Mr Abrego Garcia of involvement in human trafficking.

She appeared to be referencing a report in The Tennessee Star, a conservative news website, which claimed Mr Abrego Garcia was detained by a Tennessee highway patrol officer on suspicion of human trafficking in December 2022.  suspicion of(remember that part)

A report by the Department of Homeland Security said he was stopped for speeding and not staying in his lane.

There were eight other people in the car without luggage, the report said, which led the officer to suspect it could be a case of human trafficking.

However, there was no criminal case lodged against Mr Abrego Garcia.

"Kilmar worked in construction and sometimes transported groups of workers between job sites, so it's entirely plausible he would have been pulled over while driving with others in the vehicle," Ms Vasquez Sura said about the incident.

From El Salvador to Maryland 

According to court filings, Kilmar Abrego Garcia was born in July 1995 in the neighborhood of Los Nogales in El Salvador, where he helped his family run a business making pupusas, a local cuisine. He has said he and his family received death threats and were extorted by the local gang Barrio 18.

He crossed the border illegally near McAllen, Texas, in March 2012 when he was 16 years old, according to documents posted on X by Attorney General Pam Bondi. From the border, Abrego Garcia made his way to Maryland to live with his brother, who is a U.S. citizen.

In 2016, he met his wife, Jennifer Vasquez Sura, who is a U.S. citizen. They had a young son together, and Vasquez Sura has two children from a previous marriage. Abrego Garcia was a sheet metal apprentice and a member of the local union.

A 2019 arrest and gang allegations 

Abrego Garcia was arrested in March 2019 in a Home Depot parking lot in Hyattsville with three other men for “loitering.” His attorneys said he was there looking for day labor work. Police assessed that he was a gang member at the time, according to arrest documents. He had no criminal record at the time, which the documents also state.

When Abrego Garcia was arrested, he had just under an ounce of marijuana on him, according to the Hyattsville Police Department. The drugs were seized but authorities did not file charges.

One of the men arrested that day was known to the Prince George’s County Police Department as an MS-13 gang member, according to a document titled “gang field interview sheet.”

Police interviewed the men, including Abrego Garcia. The document said he was wearing “a Chicago Bulls hat and a hoodie with rolls of money covering the eyes, ears and mouth of the presidents” on the bills. The officers said such clothing was “indicative of the Hispanic gang culture.”

The officers also said they consulted with a “past proven and reliable confidential source,” who “advised” that Abrego Garcia was an active gang member who had the moniker “Chele.”

His attorneys noted Abrego Garcia was not charged and said in court documents that “there is no reliable evidence in the record to support” that he is a member of MS-13, adding that the allegation “is based on hearsay relayed by a confidential source” and the clothing he was wearing.

The Prince George’s County Police Department said multiple members of its gang unit interviewed the four men after their arrest.

Its detectives “had reasonable suspicion, based upon their training and experience” to say that three of the men, including Abrego Garcia, “displayed traits associated with MS-13 gang culture,” the department said.

“This was based on tattoos, clothing, as well as information from a source,” police said.

Police did not arrest any of the men, said they have not interacted with Abrego Garcia again and have not received any new intelligence related to him.

One of the detectives who interviewed the men was former officer Ivan Mendez, who was suspended in April 2019 as part of an unrelated matter, police said. Mendez pleaded guilty to “misconduct in office” in that unrelated incident.

As a result, the department proposed that Mendez’s employment be terminated, which he accepted, a statement from police said. Mendez was terminated from the department in December 2022.

Hyattsville officers knew there was an ongoing murder investigation in Prince George's County when they arrested the four individuals in the Home Depot parking lot. 

Police identified two men, one of whom was Abrego Garcia, as having been previously detained in a murder investigation, according to a Department of Homeland Security document from 2019. Abrego Garcia denied being connected to a murder investigation, the documents say, and he was never charged.

After Abrego Garcia was arrested, he was taken to the Prince George’s County Police Department’s office for questioning in that homicide investigation along with the three other individuals. After questioning he was turned over to ICE.

The release of documents on April 16 was the fullest detailing of the circumstance around his arrest and came after weeks of pressure on administration officials to prove its contention that Abrego Garcia was a member of the MS-13 gang.

The Department of Homeland Security also posted on social media that Abrego Garcia’s wife had received a temporary protective order against him in 2021. Vasquez Sura did not appear for the hearing and the case was ultimately dismissed. She released a statement explaining what happened.

“After surviving domestic violence in a previous relationship, I acted out of caution after a disagreement with Kilmar by seeking a civil protective order in case things escalated,” Vasquez Sura said in a statement Wednesday. “Things did not escalate, and I decided not to follow through with the civil court process.”

“No one is perfect, and no marriage is perfect. That is not a justification for ICE’s action of abducting him and deporting him to a country where he was supposed to be protected from deportation,” she added.

The administration has also accused Abrego Garcia of being involved in “human trafficking,” but did not release evidence of the claim until April 18, when the Department of Homeland Security released a report detailing a traffic stop in Tennessee in 2022 where an officer suspected Abrego Garcia of human trafficking while driving a vehicle with eight other people.

Abrego Garcia said the men were traveling for construction work, according to the report. Because there was no luggage in the vehicle, the officer on the scene suspected it could be human trafficking, it said.

The Tennessee Highway Patrol said in a statement that in 2022 Abrego Garcia was stopped for speeding on I-40. The agency contacted federal law enforcement, which decided not to detain him, the statement said.

When the Highway Patrol ran his license, it discovered it was expired and there was a note to call federal authorities because of his alleged affiliation with MS-13 following the incident in 2019, a senior Tennessee law enforcement official said.

When the agency called ICE, it declined to pick him up and take him into custody, the official said. He was released without charges.

The interaction between Abrego Garcia and the agency was “cordial,” the official said, adding that Abrego Garcia said the other men in the car were traveling between construction jobs.

“Kilmar worked in construction and sometimes transported groups of workers between job sites, so it’s entirely plausible he would have been pulled over while driving with others in the vehicle,” his wife said in a statement. “He was not charged with any crime or cited for any wrongdoing. Unfortunately, Kilmar is currently imprisoned without contact with the outside world, which means he cannot respond to the claims or defend himself.”

What was his immigration status?

After his 2019 arrest, Abrego Garcia was handed over to immigration authorities and placed in deportation proceedings. 

Vasquez Sura said she and her husband testified in his defense against the allegations that he was a gang member and sought his release, according to court documents. She described the process as “emotional and unfair.”

Despite their testimony, a judge denied Abrego Garcia bond after his arrest outside the Home Depot, documents released by the Justice Department show.

“Although the Court is reluctant to give evidentiary weight to the Respondent’s clothing as an indication of gang affiliation, the fact that a ‘past, proven, and reliable source of information’ verified the Respondent’s gang membership, rank, and gang name is sufficient to support that the Respondent is a gang member, and the Respondent has failed to present evidence to rebut that assertion,” Immigration Judge Elizabeth Kessler wrote in 2019. Her decision was upheld by another judge in an appeals hearing.

Kessler also noted there was a seeming discrepancy regarding why the government arrested him. One form stated it was in relation to a murder investigation, she wrote, while another states police approached him “because he and others were loitering outside of Home Depot.” Abrego Garcia responded that “there is no reliable evidence in the record to support” that he is a member of MS-13 and that the allegation “is based on hearsay relayed by a confidential source.”

Abrego Garcia then filed for asylum and withholding of removal, a temporary form of legal protection, so that he would not be deported to El Salvador. Before his 2019 hearing, authorities told the court that their evidence of Abrego Garcia’s gang membership was limited to the “gang field interview sheet” from the Home Depot arrest, and they had nothing further to add.

An immigration judge barred Abrego Garcia from being sent to El Salvador, saying he proved he had a “well-founded fear of future persecution” from local gangs. The court granted withholding of removal as long as he checked in with authorities annually, something he attested to doing in court filings. This gave him legal status in the United States temporarily and allowed him to receive a work permit.

ICE did not appeal, and Abrego Garcia was released. He returned to his family, where he resumed working and began a five-year apprenticeship program to become a licensed journeyman, his wife wrote in an affidavit.

“We really believed that the false accusations had been cleared up and that they were behind us,” she wrote.

Deportation to El Salvador

On March 12, Abrego Garcia was pulled over by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers while he was with his child on his way home from a worksite in Baltimore. He was on the phone with his wife and told her he had pulled into the parking lot of an Ikea when an officer “put his lights on.”

“I told him to put me on speaker when he was talking with the police because he does not feel confident speaking English,” Vasquez Sura wrote in a declaration provided to the court.

When an officer got to Abrego Garcia’s car, according to Vasquez Sura, they told him to roll down the windows and step out of the vehicle. Abrego Garcia told the officer his son was in the back seat and had special needs. In a sworn declaration, she says officers then hung up the call, and minutes later someone called back, identified themself as a person with the Department of Homeland Security, and told her she needed to get there in 10 minutes to pick up her son or they would “call child protective services.”

When she arrived, she said, Abrego Garcia was on the curb in handcuffs, and officers on the scene claimed his “immigration status had changed,” Vasquez Sura wrote.

“They asked me if I wanted to say goodbye to Kilmar,” Vasquez Sura wrote. “Kilmar was crying and I told him he would come back home because he hadn’t done anything wrong.”

He was arrested by immigration authorities and transferred to facilities in Maryland, Louisiana and Texas, the declaration said. During that time, Abrego Garcia spoke on the phone with his wife five times. On March 15, he was sent to El Salvador.

“I never heard from Kilmar again,” Vasquez Sura wrote.

On March 16, the Salvadoran president posted a video showing people being loaded off planes and sent to the CECOT megaprison. Vasquez Sura said she recognized her husband in photos and video from the prison where he was being dragged by guards, because of the scars on his head and tattoos.

On March 24, Vasquez Sura filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of her husband against the Trump administration in the District of Maryland. The suit argued that because of the 2019 order barring him from being sent to El Salvador, the Trump administration violated the law.

Abrego Garcia’s team asked a judge to order the government to immediately request his release, launching the ongoing legal battle over whether he will remain in a Salvadoran prison or return to Maryland.

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And so, here we are. As a reminder:

Mr. Garcia, Ms. Vasquez-Sura and their infant child

 

To be clear, Trump has been incredibly transparent about the fact that he has no interest in seeing Kilmar Abrego Garcia returned to the United States because he, Trump, KNOWS WITHOUT EVIDENCE that Mr. Garcia is an "M-13 Gang Member."

 

To that, keep in mind, he has shown a complete and total lack of leadership in allowing Kristi Noem, Secretary/Treasurer, whatever, of "Homeland Security" to remove Mr. Garcia and making NO EFFORTS to bring him home to the United States.

Tuesday, April 29, 2025

Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia, Part 1

On July 1, 2024, the Supreme Court ruled in a 6–3 decision that presidents have absolute immunity for acts committed as president within their core constitutional purview, at least presumptive immunity for official acts within the outer perimeter of their official responsibility, and no immunity for unofficial acts.

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Less than a year ago, The United States Supreme Court in a 6 to 3 ruling determined the above statement.

They did not, however, rule or decide what constitutes an “official act.”  Now, in May 2025, Trump faces a multitude of legal challenges in court, some of which fall under “official acts”, specifically the wrongful detainment and subsequent deportation of not only suspected El Salvadoran gang members, but also one particular immigrant, Kilmar Abrego Garcia.

The biggest mistake Donny made was telling his D.O.J. to remove “illegal aliens”, by proclamation of the “Alien Enemies Act” of 1798.  That particular “act” is specifically written and designed to be implemented only in time of war with a specific nation(s).

None of that has happened, although SCOTUS, has allowed it to be used sparingly for the time being. 

On Friday, April 4, the United States District Court for the District of Maryland entered an order directing the Gov­ernment to “facilitate and effectuate the return of [Abrego Garcia] to the United States by no later than 11:59 PM on Monday, April 7.”  

To be clear, NO, Donny was not on pins and needles or even the least bit worried about this since, hey it was the DOJ who did that, and well, he simply doesn’t care because in his pea-brain, Garcia was a gang member… with no evidence.

Given all of that, now SCOTUS is going to have to back-track and start defining “official acts” because removing ANYONE/ANYBODY without due process is illegal.  Again, Donny don’t care.  He’d better hope that Mr. Garcia 1) is NOT harmed in that El Salvador prison and 2) doesn’t get returned in a pine box.

Although Trump cannot be prosecuted while in office, he absolutely can in 2028 after his second and final term has run its course.  My guess would be a civil trial, but not necessarily.

This is a PDF of the Supreme Court ruling against the Trump Administration for wrongful deportation of an El Salvadoran immigrant, Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who the administration acknowledges was wrongfully deported as the result of an "administrative error."

https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/24pdf/24a949_lkhn.pdf

(Click top link on new page to download PDF ruling)

Bullshit.  Nothing "wrongful" going on here. It was willful, it was impulsive and Trump just wanted him out because he a filthy, disgusting racist who hate ANY and ALL brown and Black people.

Jennifer Vasquez Sura, the wife of Mr Abrego Garcia, Kilmar and their infant child.
 
Jennifer Vasquez Sura, the wife of Mr Abrego Garcia speaking to the crowd about Mr. Garcia unlawful, illegal removal from the United States for "alleged gang activity."

El Savadoran prison where alleged M-13 gang members are currently held as well as Mr. Garcia

The case of Kilmar Abrego Garcia - a 29-year-old from El Salvador who was deported from the US in March - has prompted a legal showdown over the administration's immigration policy.

Judges all the way up to the US Supreme Court have ruled that Mr Abrego Garcia was deported in error and that the US government should help "facilitate" his return to his home in Maryland.

But the White House has accused Mr Abrego Garcia of being a member of the transnational Salvadorian gang MS-13, a designated foreign terrorist organisation, saying that he "will never live" in the US again.

Mr Abrego Garcia denies he is a member of the gang and he has not been convicted of any crime.

BBC Verify has examined court documents and public records to determine what's known – and what is still unknown – about Mr Abrego Garcia and his alleged ties to MS-13.

What is the evidence for alleged MS-13 links?

Mr Abrego Garcia has acknowledged entering the US illegally in 2012, according to court documents.

In March 2019 he was detained along with three other people in Hyattsville, Maryland, in the parking lot of a Home Depot.

Officers at the Prince George's County Police Department said the men were "loitering" and subsequently identified Mr Abrego Garcia and two of the others as members of MS-13.

In a document titled the "Gang Field Interview Sheet", the local police detailed their observations.

They said Mr Abrego Garcia was wearing a "Chicago Bulls hat and a hoodie with rolls of money covering the eyes, ears and mouth of the presidents on the separate denominations".

Officers claimed the clothing was "indicative of the Hispanic gang culture" and that "wearing the Chicago Bulls hat represents they are a member in good standing with the MS-13".

Steven Dudley, a journalist and author who has spent years studying the MS-13 gang, said that it is true that "at some point, the Chicago Bulls logo with the horns became a stand-in of sorts for the MS-13's devil horns symbol".

But wearing the logo of the hugely popular basketball team, he added, is of course not exclusive to the gang.

"Any assertions about gang affiliation would need to be corroborated with testimony, criminal history, and other corroborating evidence," Mr Dudley said.

According to the field interview sheet and other court documents, officers said they were also advised by a "proven and reliable source" that Mr Abrego Garcia was an active member of MS-13's "westerns clique", with the rank of "chequeo".

However, Mr Dudley says that a "chequeo" is not a rank but is instead used to refer to recruits who are yet to be initiated.

Lawyers for Mr Abrego Garcia's argued in court filings that the "westerns clique" is based in New York, where they say their client has never lived. And according to government documents, he has dismissed the information given to police against him as "hearsay".

According to his lawyers, Mr Abrego Garcia has never been convicted of any criminal offence, including gang membership, in the US or in El Salvador. He lived in the US for 14 years, had three children and worked in construction, according to court records.

But the judge who presided over his 2019 case said that based on the confidential information, there was sufficient evidence to support Mr Abrego Garcia's gang membership. That finding was later upheld by another judge.

As a result Mr Abrego Garcia was refused bail and remained in custody. During this time he applied for asylum to prevent his deportation to El Salvador.

In October 2019 he was granted a "withholding of removal" order, court documents show - a status different from asylum, but one which prevented the US government from sending him back to El Salvador because he could face harm.

Mr Abrego Garcia's lawyers say that he was granted the status based on his "well-founded" fear of persecution by Barrio-18, the main rival gang of MS-13.

He said that prior to him entering the US, his family and their business had been threatened and extorted by Barrio-18.

Since 2019, when he was released with the protective order, Mr Abrego Garcia's lawyers say he has had yearly check-ins with immigration officials, which he has attended "without fail and without incident".

These are the "hand tattoos" on which Trump and his "justice" department based their decision to snatch & grab Mr. Garcia and send him on his way to that El Salvador prison:

It's CLEARLY a Photoshopped image with the letters "M" "S" "1" "3" added. No question about that. But, being the simpleton he is, Trump accepted it as "proof " that Garcia MUST BE an MS-13 Gang member.

This is a much better, more complete picture of Mr. Garcia's left hand showing NO "gang affiliation" tattoos.

According to various tattoo artists, these are the actual meanings of those 4 symbols on Mr. Garcia's left hand:

Marijuana leaf = Smoke pot

Smily face = Get high

Cross =  Love God

Skull = Until I die

Doesn't exactly sound like a gang affiliation as much as a spiritual young man just trying to live his life in peace with his family.  

Go figure.