Abrego Garcia’s lawyer explodes “shocking claims” behind Trump administrator resistance
Kilmar Abrego Garcia remains imprisoned in El Salvador after the U.S. government illegally dispatched him in March. According to the lawyer’s latest application, the Trump administration is still boycotting the rewards that promote him, despite the judge ordering judges to do so at all levels of the court system.
“The government requires the court to accept a shocking claim that federal officials can rob the country’s residents and deposit them in foreign prisons, and there is no court in the United States that has any jurisdiction over it,” Abrego Garcia’s lawyer wrote in a motion against the government.
The motion filed last week is being tried by U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis, who ordered the government to promote his return two months ago. The Supreme Court largely supported her order in April, but the Superior Court order did not fully approve the order, leaving public issues while sending the case back to a Maryland judge for further litigation.
The Supreme Court said on April 10 that the “right order” correctly requires the government to “promote” the release of Abrego Garcia from El Salvador detention and ensure that his case is handled if he has not been sent incorrectly to El Salvador. ” However, the government has not done so.
Since then, litigation in the lower court has been slowly unfolding to compare with Abrego Garcia’s lawyer, who said in the opposition that the government is simply trying to redefine the “regeneration argument” in the motion for dismissal. The government can now submit a summary of the final reply before the XINIS rules, which will usually expire within two weeks. But Abrego Garcia’s lawyers asked the judge to cut its deadline to one week. They wrote: “A further introduction to the regeneration argument should not extend cases that have been delayed for too long.
So, although more immigration has appeared in the government since Abrego Garcia’s illegal removal, the government has sent it wrongly to other countries, but his return has not been seen.
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This article was originally published on msnbc.com