Supreme Court says US must begin process to release Maryland man deported to El Salvador

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Kilmar Abrego Garcia was arrested near his Maryland home in March and deported to El Salvador. His family has sued to force the U.S. to return him.

WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court ordered the Trump administration on Thursday to begin the process of releasing a Maryland man it mistakenly deported to El Salvador. Federal immigration agents arrested Kilmar Abrego Garcia, 29, on March 12 after pulling him over in an Ikea parking lot near his home in Beltsville, Maryland, about half an hour outside of Washington. Officials contend he is a member of the MS-13 criminal gang, although they have presented no evidence to back up that claim.

Three days after his arrest, Abrego Garcia was deported even though he had a protective order barring his expulsion from the United States. He was sent to El Salvador's Terrorism Confinement Center, known as CECOT, which has been criticized for its harsh and dangerous conditions, as well as its rough treatment of prisoners. The Trump administration admitted in court documents that his deportation was a mistake, which it blamed it on an “administrative error.



” But the Justice Department says it has no authority to return him to the United States because he is in a foreign country. U.S.

District Judge Paula Xinis of Maryland ruled on April 4 that the government acted illegally in expelling Abrego Garcia and ordered the administration to return him to the U.S. by the end of April 7.

But Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts put her order on hold, pending the high court’s review of the case. Abrego Garcia was among the hundreds of alleged members of criminal gangs MS-13 and Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua the government expelled from the United States and sent to El Salvador. Abrego Garcia, however, had won a court order in an earlier case that protected him from being removed from the United States.

More: A Maryland dad was sent to El Salvador prison by mistake. Can his community get him back? A federal immigration judge issued that order after Abrego Garcia was arrested in 2019 outside a Home Depot in Hyattsville, Maryland. Government lawyers argued that a confidential informant had claimed he was a member of MS-13.

Abrego Garcia, who is from El Salvador, contended he was not a gang member and that his parents had sent him to the United States when he was a teenager because he was under pressure to join a rival gang of MS-13. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: SCOTUS: US must begin process to release deported Maryland man.