The lawyer said

happen6:24The lawyer said
Kilmar Abrego Garcia said it doesn’t matter which tattoo.
It is important that her client was wrongly deported to El Salvador, despite two court orders, which said the U.S. government has worked to bring him back.
US President Trump pointed out his knuckle tattoo as proof while painting Garcia with a violent gangster.
“His character, whatever he deserves – the reason the government is trying to push the narrative we should care about – doesn’t matter,” Gandhi told Gandhi. happen Host nilk ʧksal.
“If the government does not honestly work to bring him back as ordered by the Supreme Court, then I think we should all worry and wonder, you know, who is next?”
Trump administration’s conflict statement
Garcia, an El Salvadorian immigrant who lives in Maryland with his wife and three children, was detained on March 14 and asked about his alleged involvement in the gang MS-13, which the U.S. State Department has designated as a foreign terrorist organization.
His attorney denied that he had any gang affiliation. He has not been charged with any crime.
Although Garcia was sent to El Salvador on March 15 in 2019 The court ordered him to be prohibited from expelling him. The Trump administration later admitted it was an administrative error.
A Maryland judge ordered the government to “promote and implement” Garcia’s return immediately, and the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the ruling.
happen6:25The lawyer said
The U.S. government has repeatedly insisted that Garcia’s fate is in their hands, and only El Salvadorian President Naibu Bukel has the right to release him.
But in an interview with ABC News’ Terry Moran on Tuesday, Trump admitted that he could release Garcia if he wanted and return with a simple phone call.
“They are talking in their mouths,” Gandhi said. “It’s frustrating, and I don’t have a good answer to how we understand these ambivalent statements.”
She accused the government of “trying to slander this person’s name and put everything in the media, but, you know, don’t put anything in the real court.”
“That’s not the method I believe in, nor is it the system I believe in,” she said.
Knuckle Tattoo
In the same ABC interview, Trump insisted that Garcia had an MS-13 tattoo on her knuckles.
Garcia’s photos show four symbols on his knuckles: leaves, smiley face, cross and skull. Several experts say tattoos are not evidence of gang ownership.
On social media, Trump repeatedly shared photos of himself holding a printed Garcia knuckle tattoo with “MS 1 3” superimposed on the photos in digital text, with each character corresponding to one of the tattoos.
Trump insisted in an interview with Moran that the photos he shared had not changed, which seemed to suggest Garcia’s name had a tattoo engraved on his knuckles.
When Moran tried to correct the record, Trump inserted: “MS-13. It said MS-13.”
Over the weekend, thousands of protesters gathered throughout the United States to condemn President Donald Trump’s deportation policy, calling them the end of due process. Meanwhile, the Supreme Court prevented the evacuation of the White House from immigrants who planned to deport under wartime laws.
Gandhi said she could not confirm the client’s tattoo in one way or another because she and her colleagues “refuse to have any contact with him.”
When asked about his performance in prison, she said, “I would love to tell you. The real answer is that I don’t know. I found the information about him is the same as you.”
Domestic abuse charges
Trump and his officials also accused Garcia of domestic violence on the grounds that his wife, Jennifer Vasquez Sura, filed a 2021 protection order petition that accused him of assaulting her.
Sura said in a statement on April 16 that she decided to abandon the petition, and that she and her husband “can handle the situation privately in the family, including going to consult,” the BBC News reported.
She has been supporting his career since he was deported.
“He was illegally detained, kidnapped and disappeared by the Trump administration, even though they admitted it was a mistake,” Sulla said during a protest in Washington, D.C.
Meanwhile, Democrats took Garcia’s case with Maryland Sen. Chris van Hollen He was visited in El Salvador last month.
Democratic senators have proposed a resolution that forces the administration to report to Congress to comply with the court’s steps, while another forces the U.S. State Department to review the human rights issue of El Salvador.
In recent months, under the Alien Enemy Act of 1798, the Trump administration has deported hundreds of people (mostly Venezuelans) to El Salvador, accusing them of being members of gangs without evidence or trial.
A U.S. federal judge ruled that deportation was “out of the scope of law.”
Gandhi said despite the head rotation in the case, she believes the rule of law will prevail and her client will be released.
“I think we all should believe this because that’s the establishment of our society. If we give up on that and we don’t keep working on it, what’s left of us?”