Essayer OR - Gratuit
Wrongfully deported man requests asylum
Los Angeles Times
|August 28, 2025
Kilmar Abrego Garcia faces the prospect of being sent to Uganda by U.S. government.
KILMAR Abrego Garcia, center, is joined by supporters at ICE's field office in Baltimore on Monday.
Kil-mar Abrego Garcia, whose case has come to encapsulate much of President Trump's hard-line immigration agenda, wants to seek asylum in the United States, his lawyers told a federal judge Wednesday.
Abrego Garcia, 30, was detained Monday by U.S. Customs and Immigration Enforcement in Baltimore after leaving a Tennessee jail on Friday. The Trump administration said it intends to deport him to the African country of Uganda.
Administration officials have said he’s part of the dangerous MS-13 gang, an allegation Abrego Garcia denies.
The Salvadoran national’s lawyers are fighting the deportation efforts in court, arguing he has the right to express fear of persecution and torture in Uganda. Abrego Garcia has also told immigration authorities he would prefer to be sent to Costa Rica if he must be removed from the U.S.
A request for asylum in 2019
A U.S. immigration judge denied his request for asylum in 2019 because he applied more than a year after he had fled to the U.S. He left El Salvador at the age of 16, around 2011, to join his brother, who had become a U.S. citizen and was living in Maryland.
Although Abrego Garcia was denied asylum, the immigration judge did issue an order shielding him from deportation to El Salvador because he faced credible threats of violence from a gang there that had terrorized him and his family. He was granted a form of protection known as “withholding of removal,” which prohibits him from being sent to El Salvador but allows his deportation to another country.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition August 28, 2025 de Los Angeles Times.
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