
Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia, a building worker Maryland, whose unlawful deportation for Salvador made him a symbol of the aggressive immigration policy of US President Donald Trump, was again taken into custody of American immigration and customs enforcement (ICE).
Detained in Baltimor
Abrego, 30, was detained after a conversation in Ice’s Baltimore Field Office at 8 o’clock, told reporters Simon Sandoval-Moshenberg. According to Reuters, his wife and brother who accompanied him left the office without him.
The arrest comes only a few days after the Abrabo was released from a crime in Tennessee, where it was held for more than five months, including the time in the notorious Salvador Mega-imprisonment after his misleading deportation in March.
Deportation threat to Uganda
Federal officials said to Abrego’s lawyers that he could be deported to Uganda if he refused to blame for accusations of illegal migrants in US prosecutors instead of Costa Rica-more Spanish-speaking Central American nation-as if he agrees.
His lawyers say deportation to Uganda, an East African nation to which he has no ties, would be “more dangerous”.
Alleged
Abrego confessed that he was not guilty for the smuggling accusation that stems from the traffic stop of 2022 in Tennessee, where the police suspected he was wearing migrants, but let him go with warning. He and his lawyers claim that the accusations are “nonsense and vindictive”, he said that the government is retaliatory for its successful legal fight against deportation Salvador early this year.
However, Trump’s administration claims to be the danger of community and claim to be associated with the MS-13 gang.
A symbol of hard immigration policy
The case Abrego became a point of ignition in March when he was unjustifiably deported to Salvador, despite the earlier finding of the judge that he faced the “justified fear” of violence. Before returning to the US in June, weeks were imprisoned under hard conditions just to face fresh smugglers.
Although he was considered eligible for preliminary release, he remained in custody at the request of his lawyers who were afraid of immediate deportation. His family – including his American wife and children – remains in Maryland, where Abbrego lives for years.
Since the discussion of action is underway, the ABREGO legal team is pushing to dismiss fees and quoted the threat of deportation of Uganda as further evidence of “vengeful prosecution”. His court in Tennessee has been gone for months, but the administration is trying to remove it in advance.
(Tagstotranslate) Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia (T) USA Immigration and recovery of customs customs