Senator Vows El Salvador Visit as Trump Admin Defies Supreme Court Over Wrongful Deportation

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In a striking move highlighting the tension between judicial authority and executive action, Maryland Senator Chris Van Hollen has declared his intent to travel to El Salvador if the Trump administration continues to defy a Supreme Court mandate to repatriate Kilmar Abrego Garcia — a Maryland resident wrongfully deported under disputed gang allegations.
In a letter to El Salvador’s ambassador, dated April 13, Van Hollen urgently requested a meeting with President Nayib Bukele during his U.S. visit to address the “illegal detention” of Abrego Garcia. The 29-year-old father of three had lived in Maryland for 14 years and was deported last month based on unverified 2019 claims linking him to MS-13. Garcia has never been charged with a crime, and a U.S. immigration judge had previously barred his removal due to credible threats from gangs in El Salvador.
Despite this, the Trump administration forcibly removed Garcia on March 15, calling it an “administrative error” while maintaining his alleged gang affiliation. Garcia now languishes in CECOT, El Salvador’s most notorious high-security prison known for housing alleged terrorists and gang leaders.
The Supreme Court unanimously backed U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis’s ruling, calling Garcia’s deportation illegal and mandating his immediate return. Yet the administration has ignored multiple court orders, including Judge Xinis’s April 4 directive demanding Garcia’s return by April 7. Frustrated by the Justice Department’s inaction, Xinis called their lack of response “extremely troubling.”
While the U.S. State Department has since confirmed Garcia is “alive and secure,” El Salvador’s President Bukele has refused to repatriate him, calling such a move “preposterous.” Trump, for his part, deflected criticism, attacking the media and suggesting the administration is weighing the legality of deporting American citizens with violent convictions to El Salvador.
Garcia’s life in the U.S. paints a different picture: arriving at 16, he built a life with his wife, Jennifer Vasquez Sura, a U.S. citizen, and their children — including two with autism and one with epilepsy. After ICE detained him in 2019, allegedly based on dubious information from a confidential informant linking him to a New York gang he’s never encountered, Garcia was denied asylum but granted protection from deportation due to gang threats in El Salvador. He was later released, worked as a unionized sheet metal apprentice, and complied with immigration protocols.
Senator Van Hollen now says he will head to El Salvador if Garcia is not returned soon. “We need to take action,” he declared. “If Kilmar is not home by midweek, I plan to travel to El Salvador this week to check on his condition and discuss his release.”
The case has stirred national controversy, raising urgent questions about the separation of powers, the rule of law, and the human cost of immigration enforcement errors.

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