What the Fight to Return a Deported Man Exposes About Due Process

Photo from AP

Kilmar Abrego García, a Maryland construction worker and father of three, remains imprisoned in El Salvador after being wrongfully deported by U.S. officials for believed involvement in MS-13. Despite a prior court order prohibiting his removal, Abrego García was deported in March to CECOT, El Salvador’s notorious maximum-security facility for gang members and suspected terrorists. The government has since announced this move to be an “administrative error”. 

Abrego Garcia’s lawyers argue the MS-13 allegations against him are based largely on an accusation from a confidential informant who claimed he was a member of the gang in New York, even though he has never lived there. In light of this, the Supreme Court has voted to uphold a lower court’s order demanding that the Department of Homeland Security takes ‘all available steps’ to return him. 

Photo from AFP/Getty Images
Justice Blocked by Politics

U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis has consistently ruled that the government’s deportation of Abrego García was “wholly unlawful” and asserts he was arrested and removed without due process. In violation of both federal law and an immigration court order granting him withholding of removal, Abrego García may now be subject to the dangerous conditions the prior court order was protecting him from. 

The immigration court granted Abrego García withholding of removal after determining he would likely face persecution if returned to El Salvador, where widespread gang violence threatened his safety. Despite that protection, the Trump administration’s legal team, now led by Solicitor General D. John Sauer, argues that facilitating his return would intrude on the president’s authority over foreign policy.

Trump administration officials also claim the U.S. has limited power now that Abrego García is in Salvadoran custody and have suggested El Salvador may have its own legal basis for holding him, despite having no charges in either country. The Supreme Court’s ruling leaves Judge Xinis’ order in place and requires the administration to “facilitate” his release and restore the bypassed legal process.

Photo from Alex Wong/Getty Images
Justice Denied, Rights Ignored

This case exposes the volatile fault line in U.S. immigration enforcement, where rapid deportation initiatives clash with legal safeguards designed to protect individuals from wrongful removal. Abrego García’s deportation, occurring in violation of a court order and founded upon unsubstantiated gang allegations, calls for concern about the future of procedural integrity.

Civil rights and immigrant advocacy groups view this case as a dangerous precedent. If someone lawfully present in the U.S., with court protection, can be deported and imprisoned abroad without recourse, due process in immigration law can be compared to an easily broken paper promise.

“This is about more than one man,” said Abrego García’s attorney in a recent filing. “It’s about whether the government can detain, deport, and abandon a person—without consequence—when it violates the law.”

Photo from AP
Three Clashing Perspectives

1. The Trump Administration:
The White House insists that this case exemplifies the limits of judicial authority in times of complex foreign diplomacy. In its emergency appeal to the Supreme Court, the Trump administration argued that Judge Xinis lacked the authority to issue the return order and that U.S. officials could not compel El Salvador to release Abrego García. The administration also raised national security concerns claiming that without direct evidence, Abrego García was connected to the MS-13 gang.

2. The Courts and Civil Rights Advocates:
Federal judges and civil rights lawyers argue that this case is a textbook example of unlawful government action. Judge Xinis and the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals have forcefully rejected the administration’s view that courts are powerless in such situations. “Unconscionable”, “Kafkaesque” and “wholly lawless” are just some of the phrases used in court opinions to describe the government’s actions. On April 10th, the majority conservative U.S. Supreme Court (with a 6-3 split), voted unanimously in a 9-0 ruling to uphold the lower court’s order to “facilitate” the return of Kilmar Abrego García.

3. The Public and Abrego García’s Family:
Supporters of Abrego García see his case as a glaring injustice of the failure of the immigration system to protect the vulnerable. Immigrant rights groups have rallied around his family to help shoulder the emotional burden of what they believe to be an instance of profound bureaucratic overreach. Meanwhile, García’s wife and three children—all U.S. citizens—wait in Maryland. His youngest son, who is 5 and autistic, was in the car with García when ICE officers detained him on March 12. The family of Kilmar Abrego García has not heard from him since he was sent to El Salvador.

As the Abrego García family waits in uncertainty, his case raises the core question: What happens when the government admits a mistake—but refuses to undo it?

Let us know your thoughts @VALLEYMag on X.

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