Published by an old curmudgeon who came to America in 1936 as a refugee from Nazi Germany and proudly served in the U.S. Army during World War II. He is a former law enforcement officer and a retired professor of criminal justice who, in 1970, founded the Texas Narcotic Officers Association. BarkGrowlBite refuses to be politically correct.
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Friday, June 06, 2025
BACK FROM EL SALVADOR
Kilmar Abrego Garcia enters US court in chains to face charges of
trafficking thousands of illegal migrants — including MS-13 gangbangers
Kilmar Abrego Garcia is now back on US soil after a long legal fight over his deportation to El Salvador.
MS-13 gangbanger Kilmar Abrego Garcia entered
a Tennessee courtroom in chains hours after he was returned to US soil
from El Salvador to face charges of trafficking thousands of illegal
immigrants — his “full-time job” for years, Attorney General Pam Bondi
announced Friday.
“He was a smuggler of humans and children and women” — including
members of the murderous prison gang he belonged to, the AG said at a
press conference announcing the federal charges.
“One hundred trips, the grand jury found, of smuggling people throughout our country,” Bondi said.Co-conspirators also alleged that
Abrego Garcia solicited nude photos of a minor, abused women he was
transporting — and was involved in the murder of a rival gang member’s
mother, Bondi said.
Co-conspirators also alleged that
Abrego Garcia solicited nude photos of a minor, abused women he was
transporting — and was involved in the murder of a rival gang member’s
mother, Bondi said.
The purported gang member, who was wrongly deported in March, was
shackled hand and foot when he appeared in a Middle District of
Tennessee courtroom Friday, flanked by Homeland Security agents,
according to local reports.
Abrego Garcia told US Magistrate Judge Barbara Holmes – in Spanish –
that he understood the charges leveled against him, as DHS and ICE
officials tussled over his custody, ABC News and WKRN reported.
He will remain in the custody of the US Marshals and will be arraigned June 13 at 10 a.m.
A man identified by Jennifer Vasquez Sura as her
husband, Kilmar Abrego Garcia, is led by force by guards through the
Terrorism Confinement Center in Tecoluca, El Salvador
Abrego Garcia’s attorney slammed the charges as “an abuse of power.”
“They’ll stop at nothing at all – even some of the most preposterous
charges imaginable – to avoid admitting that they made a mistake, which
is what everyone knows happened in this case,” Simon Sandoval-Moshenberg
said during an online press conference, ABC reported.
“Mr. Garcia is going to be vigorously defending the charges against him.”
A federal grand-jury indictment was handed up May 21 in Tennessee charging
Abrego Garcia, 29, with participating in a conspiracy to move illegal
migrants from countries such as El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and
Ecuador through Mexico and into Texas, where they would then be smuggled
to Maryland and other states.
President
Donald Trump, who has repeatedly maintained that Abrego Garcia has M-S-1-3 tattooed on his hand, also argues Abrego Garcia is a gangbanger and human trafficker.
“The grand jury found that over the past nine years, Abrego Garcia
has played a significant role in an alien smuggling ring,” Bondi said.
“They found this was his full-time job — not a contractor.
“They were using vehicles, SUVs with added seats in the back, floors
that had been ripped out,” she said. “Guns, narcotics, children, women,
MS-13 members — that is what the grand jury found.”
Abrego Garcia at one point demanded asylum in the US, claiming he was
afraid gang members would kill him if he returned to El Salvador — but
that’s only because of “the defendant’s own actions in participating in
the murder of a rival 18th Street gang member’s mother,” according to an
additional court filing calling for his detention.
In addition, Abrego Garcia “solicited nude photographs and videos of a minor, beginning in approximately 2020,” the feds said.
“These facts demonstrate Abrego Garcia is a danger to our community,”
the attorney general said. “Upon completion of his sentence, we
anticipate he will be returned to his home country of El Salvador.”
President Trump hailed the Justice Department’s decision to bring Abrego Garcia back to the US to face the charges.
“Bringing him back, you can show how bad he is,” Trump told reporters on Air Force One on Friday. “He’s a bad guy.”
Abrego Garcia, who entered the US illegally in 2011, and his
co-conspirators trafficked thousands of illegal migrants from Mexico and
Central America, including members of the Salvadoran gang MS-13, in exchange for money, according to the indictment.
They would force kids to sit on the floor “in order to maximize profits,” the document said.
During the course of the operation, one of Abrego Garcia’s
co-conspirators was arrested and deported for alien smuggling, according
to the court documents, but was later released, re-entered the US and
returned to work with him.
Prosecutors linked the operation Abrego Garcia was allegedly involved
in to a 2021 tractor-trailer crash in Mexico that killed more than 50
of the 160 migrants being transported on board.
The crew, which typically picked up migrants in the Houston area,
covered their tracks by devising stories to tell law enforcement and
confiscating immigrants’ cell phones so they could not contact anyone
until the trip was over, according to the indictment.
Abrego Garcia’s charges partly involve a 2022 vehicle stop in Tennessee.
Bodycam footage caught Abrego Garcia during a traffic stop where trafficking was suspected. Tennessee Highway Patrol
In body-camera footage that surfaced last month as the feds publicly
built their case against him, Abrego Garcia can be seen driving seven
other people – all without luggage – on a days-long trip from Texas to
Maryland.
A state trooper can be heard speculating that Abrego Garcia, who had
$1,400 cash on him, “was hauling these people for money” but ultimately
let him go with only a citation for an expired license.
He was arrested March 12 in Baltimore amid trafficking and other
accusations, including that he had MS-13 ties, and was soon deported to
El Salvador.
The Trump administration defended the move despite intense backlash,
including from the courts, which ruled that the suspect was illegally
deported.
“The Justice Department’s Grand Jury Indictment against Abrego Garcia
proves the unhinged Democrat Party was wrong, and their stenographers
in the Fake News Media were once again played like fools,” White House
press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement after his
indictment.
“Abrego Garcia was never an innocent ‘Maryland Man’– Abrego Garcia is
an illegal alien terrorist, gang member, and human trafficker who has
spent his entire life abusing innocent people, especially women and the
most vulnerable,” Leavitt continued.
She singled out Maryland Sen. Chris Van Hollen, who was a vocal
critic of Abrego Garcia’s deportation, and demanded he apologize to the
accused gangbanger’s victims.
Signs in support of Kilmar Abrego Garcia
are displayed during a press conference held by U.S. Senator Chris Van
Hollen (D-MD) at Dulles International Airport in Sterling, Virginia,
U.S., April 18, 2025.
Van Hollen instead celebrated the return of his constituent to the US
as proof that the Trump administration “finally relented to our demands
for compliance with court orders.
“As I have repeatedly said, this is not about the man, it’s about his
constitutional rights – and the rights of all,” said Van Hollen, who met Abrego Garcia for drinks
at a San Salvador hotel in April, in a statement. “The Administration
will now have to make its case in the court of law, as it should have
all along.”
A Maryland federal judge had ordered Abrego Garcia’s return to the US
on April 4. In a Friday filing, Justice Department attorneys said
the Trump administration had complied with that ruling and asked for the
underlying case to be dismissed.
“The reason why he is back and was returned is because there was an
arrest warrant,” Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche told reporters.
“As far as whether it makes the ongoing litigation in Maryland moot, I
would think so, but we don’t know about this. He just landed today.”
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