Immigration

Sen. Van Hollen flies to El Salvador as calls intensify for Kilmar Abrego Garcia's return

The trip comes one day after a federal judge ordered Trump administration officials to testify about the Maryland man's mistaken deportation to El Salvador

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U.S. Sen. Chris Van Hollen headed to El Salvador early Wednesday in an attempt to secure the release of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who was mistakenly deported last month to a notorious prison in the Central American country.

The Democratic senator from Maryland said he hopes to enter the notorious prison where Abrego Garcia is being held and check on his well-being.

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“You know, I told Mr. Abrego Garcia’s family I would do everything I could to bring him home,” Van Hollen told News4 before going through security at Dulles International Airport. “And I’m going to keep working it until he is brought home because he was illegally snatched off the streets and deported.”

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Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials detained Abrego Garcia, 29, on March 12 near IKEA in College Park as he headed to pick up his kids. Abrego Garcia was sent to the prison in El Salvador, and ICE said the deportation was an “administrative error.”

Van Hollen said he would like to meet with El Salvador President Nayib Bukele or other high-ranking officials. He's requested those meetings and a visit with Abrego Garcia and is working with the embassy, but no appointments have been confirmed.

Van Hollen's trip comes after a federal judge and the Supreme Court ordered the Trump administration to return Abrego Garcia to the U.S. The judge stopped short of finding the administration in contempt of court but did order officials to testify under oath.

The family of Kilmar Abrego Garcia is still pleading for resolution in his case. A federal judge, angry at the lack of action, repeatedly asked the Trump administration what it had done to facilitate his return to the U.S. News4's Paul Wagner reports.

Outside the hearing on Tuesday, Abrego-Garcia's wife, Jennifer Vasquez Sura, pleaded for her husband's return as demonstrators chanted in support. Vasquez Sura said her husband had been working to achieve the American dream for his family.

“That dream was shattered on March 12th when he was abducted and disappeared by the United States government in front of our 5-year-old child,” she said. “Today is 34 days after his disappearance ... I will not stop fighting until I see my husband alive.”

Van Hollen said he believes the Salvadoran president will recognize it’s in the country’s interest to help bring Abrego Garcia home so he can have due process.

On Monday, Bukele met with President Donald Trump at the White House and said he wouldn’t return Abrego Garcia, likening it to smuggling “a terrorist into the United States.”

"How can I return him to the United States? Like if I smuggle him into the United States?" Bukele said, sitting beside Trump in the Oval Office. "Of course I'm not going to do it. The question is preposterous."

US judge presses Trump administration on its refusal to return Kilmar Abrego Garcia

A federal judge said Tuesday that she will order sworn testimony by Trump administration officials to determine if they complied with her orders to facilitate the return of Abrego Garcia.

U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis in Maryland issued her order after Trump officials continually refused to retrieve Abrego Garcia. She said they defied a “clear” Supreme Court order.

She also downplayed Monday’s comments by White House officials and El Salvador’s president that they were unable to bring back Abrego Garcia, describing their statements as “two very misguided ships passing in the night.”

“The Supreme Court has spoken,” Xinis said, adding that what was said in the Oval Office on Monday “is not before the court.”

More than a month after Kilmar Abrego Garcia was wrongly deported to El Salvador, and days after the Supreme Court ordered his return to the U.S., his wife pleaded for his safe return home.

In her written order published Tuesday evening, Xinis called for the testimony of four Trump administration officials who work for ICE, the Department of Homeland Security and the State Department.

She expects the process to last about two weeks. Xinis wrote that Trump administration officials “have done nothing at all” toward returning Abrego Garcia. But, she wrote, they “remain obligated, at a minimum, to take the steps available to them toward aiding, assisting, or making easier Abrego Garcia’s release.”

The hearing came a day after White House advisers repeated the claim that they lack the authority to bring back the Salvadoran national from his native country.

Abrego Garcia’s deportation has become a flashpoint as Trump follows up on campaign promises of mass deportations, including to an El Salvador prison. Following Tuesday’s hearing, a crowd outside the federal court house in Maryland chanted, “What do we want? Due process. When do we want it? Now!”

An attorney for Abrego Garcia said contempt proceedings could be the logical next step after the fact-finding phase. “This is still a win, and this is still progress,” Rina Gandhi said. “We’re not done yet, though.”

Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia, a Beltsville, Maryland, father, was wrongfully deported to El Salvador, ICE admits. News4 takes a deep dive into what happened and what could be next.

What to know about Abrego Garcia and his deportation

Abrego Garcia lived in the U.S. for roughly 14 years, during which he worked construction, got married and was raising three children with disabilities, according to court records.

A U.S. immigration judge had shielded Abrego Garcia from deportation to El Salvador in 2019, ruling that he would likely face persecution there by local gangs that had terrorized his family. He was also given a federal permit to work in the United States, where he was a metal worker and union member, according to Abrego Garcia’s lawyers.

But the Trump administration expelled Abrego Garcia to El Salvador last month anyway. Administration officials later described the mistake as “an administrative error” but insisted that Abrego Garcia was a member of the MS-13 gang.

Abrego Garcia was never charged with a crime and has denied the allegations. News4 has not found any local criminal record. His attorneys have pointed out that the criminal informant claimed he was a member of MS-13 in Long Island, New York, where he has never lived.

Kilmar Abrego Garcia is an El Salvadoran immigrant at the center of a legal battle that could reshape American immigration policy. Here’s what you need to know.

Xinis had ordered the Trump administration in early April to bring Abrego Garcia back. And the U.S. Supreme Court agreed last week that the U.S. government must “facilitate” Abrego Garcia’s release.

But the White House has balked at trying to broker his return, arguing the courts can’t intrude on the president’s diplomacy powers.

Xinis ordered the U.S. on Friday to provide daily status updates on plans to return Abrego Garcia. The Trump administration responded the next day, saying he was alive in the El Salvador prison. But it has only doubled down on its decision not to tell a federal court whether it has any plans to repatriate Abrego Garcia.

In a filing Tuesday afternoon, Trump administration attorneys said the government is prepared to facilitate his return. But they said that his protection from being deported to El Salvador would be removed, and that he could be deported back to El Salvador or to a third country, they said.

In a court filing Tuesday, Abrego Garcia’s lawyers rejected the idea that the U.S. lacks the authority to retrieve him. They noted that the U.S. is paying El Salvador to hold prisoners, including Abrego Garcia, and “can exercise those same contractual rights to request their release.”

Bukele struck a deal under which the U.S. will pay about $6 million for El Salvador to imprison Venezuelan immigrants for a year. Trump has said openly that he would also favor El Salvador taking custody of American citizens who have committed violent crimes, which is likely illegal.

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