El Salvador, Maryland
Digest more
Top News
Overview
Impacts
“No one should be deported to the very country where a judge determined they will face persecution,” Maryland Gov. Wes Moore, a Democrat, wrote on the social platform X on Tuesday.
From The Associated Press
In an exclusive interview, the wife of a Maryland migrant spoke to CBS News after the Trump administration admitted to mistakenly deporting the man to a notorious El Salvador prison due to an "adminis...
From Yahoo
The prison where he is being held, known as CECOT, has long had a reputation of having brutal conditions.
From The New York Times
Read more on News Digest
Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia, who was in the U.S. legally, is now in prison in El Salvador, and federal courts have no jurisdiction to order his release, the Trump administration said in a court filing.
2don MSN
The deportation came despite a past judge's order. Vice President JD Vance said in a post Tuesday the man had "no legal right" to be in the U.S.
The White House said Tuesday Abrego Garcia would not be returning to the U.S., despite an ICE official admitting to a judge a day earlier that his deportation to El Salvador’s notorious Terrorism Confinement Center was an “oversight.
A Maryland man’s deportation is under scrutiny after the Trump administration revealed in court filings Monday night that it sent him to a maximum security prison in El Salvador by mistake. Kilmer Abrego-Garcia’s deportation was an irreversible “administrative error,
An 'administrative error' sends a Maryland father to a prison in El Salvador. His family is fighting for his return.
Fox News host Jesse Watters slams the media's spin on an alleged gang leader's deportation on 'Jesse Watters Primetime.'
After the deportation flights, White House Press Secretary Karoline ... the U.S. The Trump administration said U.S. courts lack jurisdiction to order his return. Maryland Judge Paula Xinis scheduled a hearing Friday in Greenbelt, Maryland, to address ...
His legal presence in the US was based on a protection known as “withholding of removal,” which was granted by an immigration judge in 2019. That status is awarded when a judge determines that deporting someone would expose them to persecution or torture in their home country.