El
Salvador’s Leader Says He Won’t Return Wrongly Deported Maryland Man
An Oval
Office meeting between President Trump and President Nayib Bukele of El
Salvador was a blunt example of Mr. Trump’s defiance of the federal courts.
Zolan
Kanno-Youngs
By Zolan
Kanno-Youngs
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/14/us/politics/trump-bukele-prison-deported-migrants.html
Published
April 14, 2025
Updated
April 15, 2025, 1:25 a.m. ET
In an Oval
Office meeting with President Trump on Monday, President Nayib Bukele of El
Salvador said that he would not return a Maryland man who was wrongly deported
from the United States and sent to a notorious Salvadoran prison.
Mr. Bukele,
who has positioned himself as a key ally to Mr. Trump, in part by opening his
country’s prisons to deportees, sat next to the president and a group of
cabinet officials who struck a combative tone over the case, which has reached
the Supreme Court.
“Of course
I’m not going to do it,” Mr. Bukele said when reporters asked if he was willing
to help return the man, Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia, a 29-year-old father of
three who was deported last month. The Trump administration has acknowledged
that his deportation was the result of an “administrative error.”
The message
from the meeting was clear: Neither Mr. Trump nor Mr. Bukele had any intention
of returning Mr. Abrego Garcia, even though the Supreme Court has ruled that he
should come back to the United States. The case has come to symbolize Mr.
Trump’s defiance of the courts and his willingness to deport people without due
process.
Mr. Trump
also mused about the possibility of sending American citizens convicted of
violent crimes to prison in El Salvador, although he said Attorney General Pam
Bondi was still studying the legality of the proposal.
“If it’s a
homegrown criminal, I have no problem, no,” Mr. Trump said. “I’m talking about
violent people. I’m talking about really bad people.”
Before the
full group of reporters was allowed into the Oval Office for the meeting,
television cameras captured Mr. Trump telling Mr. Bukele to build more prisons.
Mr. Trump
invited some of his top officials to Monday’s meeting, much of which was held
in front of news cameras. Ms. Bondi and Stephen Miller, who is the architect of
Mr. Trump’s immigration agenda, accused Mr. Abrego Garcia of being a member of
the MS-13 gang.
Mr. Abrego
Garcia has never been charged with or convicted of being in a gang. In 2011,
Mr. Abrego Garcia’s lawyers say, he fled threats and violence in El Salvador
and came to the United States illegally to join his brother, a U.S. citizen, in
Maryland. He later married an American citizen. In 2019, an immigration judge
prohibited the United States from deporting him to El Salvador, saying he might
face violence or torture there.
Mr. Abrego
Garcia’s lawyers did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
“That’s up
to to El Salvador if they want to return him,” Ms. Bondi said. “That’s not up
to us.” Mr. Miller went further, arguing that a federal judge had overstepped
in directing the administration to provide a road map to Mr. Abrego Garcia’s
return. “Neither the secretary of state nor the president could be compelled by
anybody to forcibly retrieve a citizen of El Salvador from El Salvador who
again is a member of MS-13,” he said.
Mr. Bukele
followed suit, saying that returning Mr. Abrego Garcia would be akin to
smuggling “a terrorist into the United States.” As the Salvadoran president
talked, Mr. Trump, surrounded by cabinet members who spoke in support of the
president on cue, smiled in approval.
On Monday
evening, more than an hour after the deadline ordered by a judge, the Justice
Department submitted its daily update outlining what steps it had taken to
return Mr. Abrego Garcia to the United States. It echoed many of the
recalcitrant remarks that administration officials had made in the Oval Office.
Representative
Hakeem Jeffries of New York, the top House Democrat, called on the courts to
hold Trump administration officials in contempt.
“The Supreme
Court and/or the federal district court actually needs to enforce its order,”
Mr. Jeffries said on MSNBC, suggesting that contempt citations could be
directed at the secretaries of state and homeland security, as well as their
subordinates.
Mr. Abrego
Garcia’s wife, Jennifer Vasquez Sura, said the American and Salvadoran
governments were playing “political games” with her husband’s life.
“My heart is
heavy, but I hold on to hope and the strength of those around me,” she said.
Stephen
Vladeck, a law professor at Georgetown University, said the idea that “the
government can disappear people to a foreign country with no due process and no
responsibility for what happens next” amounted to “a rule-of-law crisis.”
“If the
government can do it to Abrego Garcia, they can do it to anybody,” Mr. Vladeck
said.
In Mr.
Bukele, Mr. Trump has found a partner in his efforts to force scores of
migrants to a Salvadoran prison and keep them there with little regard for
checks and balances.
The Supreme
Court last week ordered the administration to “facilitate” Mr. Abrego Garcia’s
return, but it never defined the specific steps that U.S. officials should take
to carry out the plan. Ms. Bondi on Monday argued that the court ruling means
the United States would need to help with Mr. Abrego Garcia’s return — such as
by providing a plane — only if Mr. Bukele were to decide to send him back to
the United States.
“The court
gave the administration an opening and the administration has taken a
millimeter-wide opening and driven a Mack truck through it,” Mr. Vladeck said.
Michael G.
Kozak, the senior bureau official in the State Department’s Bureau of Western
Hemisphere Affairs, said in a sworn statement on Saturday that, based on
information from the U.S. embassy in San Salvador, Mr. Abrego Garcia is “alive
and secure” in the prison known as the Terrorism Confinement Center, or CECOT.
In a legal
filing on Sunday, the Justice Department also argued that the courts lacked the
ability to dictate steps the White House should take to return Mr. Abrego
Garcia because only the president has the power to handle U.S. foreign policy.
The Trump
administration has invoked a centuries-old wartime authority to deport migrants
to El Salvador by alleging that they are members of violent gangs like MS-13,
which originated in the United States and operates in South America, and the
Venezuelan criminal group Tren de Aragua.
The law, the
Alien Enemies Act of 1798, allows for the summary deportation of people from
countries at war with the United States.
While some
of the deportees had criminal convictions, court papers have shown that the
evidence the government has relied on to label some of them gang members was
often little more than tattoos or clothing associated with a criminal
organization.
Though the
administration resisted helping Mr. Abrego Garcia, Senator Chris Van Hollen,
Democrat of Maryland, said on Monday that he wanted to discuss with Mr. Bukele
returning the Salvadoran migrant. He added that he would travel to El Salvador
this week if Mr. Abrego Garcia was not returned.
The Trump
administration doubled down on its incarceration agreement with Mr. Bukele on
Sunday when it announced that it had sent 10 more people alleged to be members
of the two gangs to El Salvador over the weekend.
Mr. Bukele
has found a spot on the global stage through opening the doors of his prison
system to Mr. Trump.
The Biden
administration treated Mr. Bukele, who has referred to himself as the world’s
“coolest dictator,” as a pariah. The Justice Department under the previous
administration even accused Mr. Bukele and the Salvadoran government of
secretly being lenient toward certain gang leaders. Mr. Trump has appeared to
admire Mr. Bukele as a MAGA equivalent in Latin America who won’t hesitate to
defend his domestic agenda.
At times on
Monday, Mr. Bukele and Mr. Trump broke from discussing immigration to show they
were aligned in criticizing politicians who supported allowing transgender
athletes to compete in women’s sports.
Mr. Bukele
also joked about how his staff does not include “D.E.I. hires.”
Mr. Trump
and Mr. Bukele have paired their tough-on-crime personas with highly
sensationalized public relations campaigns on social media.
After a
surge of gang violence in El Salvador, Mr. Bukele imposed a state of emergency,
which has yet to be lifted, and directed the police and military forces to
carry out mass arrests. Many of the 85,000 Salvadorans who were arrested
disappeared into the prison system without trial and without their families
knowing whether they were alive.
“The United
States should be holding Bukele’s government accountable for these serious
violations, but instead the Trump administration is cozying up to and copying
Bukele’s authoritarian playbook — rounding up people with no evidence, denying
them any due process and disappearing them in abusive Salvadoran prisons
indefinitely,” said Amanda Strayer, the senior counsel for accountability at
the advocacy group Human Rights First.
Still, Mr.
Bukele’s popularity has soared, and he was re-elected in a landslide last year
as his government reported a drop in violent crime. The Trump administration
just last week changed a travel advisory for El Salvador, effectively saying it
was safer to visit than countries like France or the United Kingdom.
The Trump
administration cited El Salvador’s progress in driving down gang violence over
the past three years, even though the Justice Department previously accused Mr.
Bukele of doling out favors to gang members in exchange for keeping homicide
numbers down.
Mr. Bukele
described the decision on social media as akin to receiving a “gold star.”
Alan Feuer
and Chris Cameron contributed reporting.
Zolan
Kanno-Youngs is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President
Trump and his administration.
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