Author Topic: Immigration; weaponized immigration; deportation  (Read 850304 times)

Body-by-Guinness

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About That “Maryland Man….”
« Reply #2400 on: April 17, 2025, 08:04:34 AM »
Don’t know how it is in the rest of the country, but in the DC area the MSM and usual suspects have gone all in on this gent, a gent in the US illegally. The “progressive” hysterics don’t bother reporting on the federal judge hip deep in this effort has a conflict of interest in the form of a daughter employed by a “progressive” org to agitate re various causes, including illegal immigration, or said judge’s apparent Never Trump ethos. The MSM hasn’t bothered reporting much about the MS-13 affiliation, though there was a piece on local news this morning dismissing a police department record showing that the “MD man” in question had a protective order filed by his wife, one where she cited his gang affiliation as one of her concerns, though she now disavows that protective order, with the MSM around here focusing instead on casting the release of the protective order info as some sort of nefarious Trump stunt.

Given info like that below, it’s surprising they are embracing this cause with such ardor:

Biden’s FBI Ordered TN Highway Patrol to Release ‘Maryland Man’ Recently Deported to El Salvador After He Was Detained in 2022 Traffic Stop on Suspicion of Human Trafficking

April 16, 2025 Tom Pappert

Kilmar Abrego Garcia

The Tennessee Star learned on Wednesday that Kilmar Abrego Garcia, an alleged member of the Central American gang Mara Salvatrucha (MS-13) who was deported to El Salvador under President Donald Trump amid legal action claiming the removal was by mistake, was suspected of being engaged in human trafficking by a Tennessee Highway Patrol (THP) officer who detained him in December 2022, leading the THP to contact the FBI for guidance. Within two hours, the FBI ultimately requested the THP release Garcia and the passengers in his vehicle. THP complied with the request.

The Star learned from sources familiar with the incident that Abrego Garcia was stopped for an unknown reason on December 6, 2022, and that the THP officer responsible for the stop immediately discovered Abrego Garcia was transporting seven passengers, with eight individuals inside the vehicle.

During a nearly two-hour traffic stop, the THP officer determined that Abrego Garcia (pictured above) was operating the vehicle without a valid driver’s license and began searching for information about him.

One source told The Star that THP ultimately discovered Abrego Garcia was on a terrorist watch list, but could not locate Abrego Garcia on a deportation list. Another source told The Star that THP did not discover Abrego Garcia on a terrorist watch list but that another one of the seven passengers in the vehicle may have been on a terrorist watch list.

THP subsequently called the FBI, which was then led by former Director Christopher Wray under the Biden administration. The FBI instructed the THP officers at the scene to capture photographs of all eight people in the vehicle and document its contents.

Once the photographs were captured, this source told The Star that the FBI requested THP release all eight individuals and that the THP officers complied with this request.

The Star learned that the circumstances of the stop made the THP officer responsible for the stop concerned that Abrego Garcia was engaged in human trafficking, but that Abrego Garcia and his passengers were nonetheless released at the request of the FBI.

Information about this incident, including the identity of the THP officer, the officer’s badge number, and the Computerized Dispatch Report code assigned to the incident, are all known to The Star, which is currently withholding this information.

Sources familiar with the Computerized Dispatch Report of the incident told The Star that the officer who filed the report confirmed that the seven individuals in the van were being transported from Texas to Maryland by Garcia.

Notably, it is a misdemeanor offense in the state of Tennessee to operate a motor vehicle without a valid driver’s license. Anyone convicted of this Class B misdemeanor faces up to six months in jail.

The officer who detained Garcia temporarily is well-respected within the Tennessee Highway Patrol, has served on a special interdiction team, and is based in a district located between Nashville and Knoxville, which includes Putnam County.

In response to Wednesday press inquiries from The Star, THP and the Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security both confirmed receiving the communication, and that communications staff would send responses which did not arrive prior to press time.

A comment request by The Star to the FBI, seeking to confirm its instructions to THP, was not immediately answered.

The Star also contacted the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (TBI), as the chief authority over human trafficking investigations in the state, to determine whether Abrego Garcia was released due to a TBI investigation, but did not receive an immediate response.

An inquiry to the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees federal human trafficking investigations, likewise went unanswered prior to press time.

Abrego Garcia is a Salvadoran citizen who illegally immigrated to the United States in 2012. Despite two judges determining he is likely to be a member of MS-13, Abrego Garcia and his family have denied this claim. In 2019, he was granted a “withholding of removal” order, which determined Abrego Garcia could not be deported to El Salvador over concerns related to his safety in his homeland, but that he could be removed to a third country.

He was deported to El Salvador under the Trump administration in March. Both U.S. District Court Judge Paula Xinis and the U.S. Supreme Court have ruled that the government must take steps to allow Abrego Garcia to return to the country. However, the high court recently halted an order by Xinis on the grounds that she sought to compel the Trump administration to engage in diplomacy with President Nayib Bukele of El Salvador.

Bukele, during a recent Oval Office meeting with President Donald Trump, stated that he had neither the authority nor the motivation to release Abrego Garcia, who is deemed a terrorist after the Trump administration added MS-13 to the federal government’s list of Foreign Terrorist Organizations.

“I don’t have the power to return him to the United States. How could I smuggle a terrorist into the United States? Of course, I’m not going to do it. The question is preposterous,” said Bukele in response to a question about Abrego Garcia.

Asked whether he would consider releasing Abrego Garcia within the borders of El Salvador, the head of state replied, “We’re not very fond of releasing terrorists into our country.”

– – –

Tom Pappert is the lead reporter for The Tennessee Star, and also reports for The Pennsylvania Daily Star and The Arizona Sun Times. Follow Tom on X/Twitter. Email tips to pappert.tom@proton.me.

https://tennesseestar.com/justice/bidens-fbi-ordered-tn-highway-patrol-to-release-maryland-man-recently-deported-to-el-salvador-after-he-was-detained-in-2022-traffic-stop-on-suspicion-of-human-trafficking/tpappert/2025/04/16/

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Immigration; weaponized immigration; deportation
« Reply #2401 on: April 17, 2025, 08:24:58 AM »
As I mentioned elsewhere today Team Trump (AG Bondi, Stephen Miller) are asserting that the President Trump's declaration of MS 13 as a terrorist org, has the legal effect of vitiating the prior order against his deportation to ES.

Body-by-Guinness

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Re: Immigration; weaponized immigration; deportation
« Reply #2402 on: April 17, 2025, 08:36:17 AM »
As I mentioned elsewhere today Team Trump (AG Bondi, Stephen Miller) are asserting that the President Trump's declaration of MS 13 as a terrorist org, has the legal effect of vitiating the prior order against his deportation to ES.

Boaberg (sp?) will no doubt attempt to do some chest thrumming nonetheless.

Body-by-Guinness

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More on MD Man
« Reply #2403 on: April 17, 2025, 10:58:17 AM »
Good to see that the "party of women" is doing such a lovely job of representing their interests:


Andy Ngo
@AndyNgo
April 16, 2025
Kilmar Abrego Garcia twice accused of domestic violence
Updated

Vanessa Vasquez, the Maryland wife of deported suspected gang terrorist Kilmar Abrego Garcia, either lied to the court when she petitioned for a domestic violence protective order against him, or she is lying now on the GoFundMe claiming he is an excellent father and spouse.

Over $194,000 has poured in as Garcia has become a hero to Democrats.

In 2020 and 2021, Vasquez requested and received emergency temporary protective orders against Garcia in Prince's County, Md. Her allegations that he is dangerous and violent are consistent with similar findings from prior U.S. immigration court rulings.

In the 2021 temporary protective order, the court wrote that it had reasonable grounds to believe that Garcia grabbed, punched, scratched and ripped off his partner's clothing in attacks on May 1 and May 4, 2021. Vasquez was allegedly injured with br uises.
Garcia was ordered to vacate from the family home, cease contact with Vasquez and stay away from both her and her mother's property. Additionally, custody of their sole child was transfered solely to Vasquez.

The couple has one child together, though Vasquez has misrepresented Garcia as the father of all three of her children.

A hearing for a final protective order was scheduled for June 17, 2021 but Vasquez did not appear and the case was later closed.

Garcia was deported to his native El Salvador on March 15 and is in prison there currently. Democrats and liberal media have demanded that the former illegal alien and accused MS-13 member be returned to the U.S.

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the Trump administration needed to "facilitate" the Salvadoran national's release.

https://ngo.locals.com/post/6851845/kilmar-abrego-garcia-twice-accused-of-domestic-violence

Body-by-Guinness

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I Know, Let’s All Die on this Illegal Immigrant Hill!
« Reply #2404 on: April 17, 2025, 02:07:08 PM »
3rd post. I am stunned that Dems are going all in on MD Man/criminal illegals. It seems an absurd hill to die on, and perhaps speaks to their desperation to find something, anything, to chuck under the wheels of the Trump train. I don’t see their effort succeeding, and suspect it’s rife with potential unintended consequences, particularly given the abject willingness to ignore SCOTUS as discussed by Julie Kelly here:

https://x.com/julie_kelly2/status/1912883782606008426

Body-by-Guinness

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SCOTUS to Hear Birthright Citizenship Case
« Reply #2405 on: April 17, 2025, 05:50:22 PM »
4th post I believe. Probably a bad idea to make book on this one, though I suspect “progressive” tears will ensue:

Supreme Court to Hear Arguments on Trump Plan to End Birthright Citizenship

The Trump administration had asked the justices to lift a nationwide pause on the policy as lower court challenges continue.

The Supreme Court affirmed the right to birthright citizenship in a landmark case in 1898.Credit...Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times

By Abbie VanSickle
Reporting from Washington
April 17, 2025
Updated 3:44 p.m. ET

The Supreme Court announced on Thursday that it would hear arguments in a few weeks over President Trump’s executive order ending birthright citizenship.

The brief order by the justices was unsigned and gave no reasoning, as is typical in such emergency cases. But the unusual move is a sign that the justices consider the matter significant enough that they would immediately hold oral argument on the government’s request to lift a nationwide pause on the policy.

The justices announced they would defer any consideration of the temporary block on the policy until they heard oral arguments, which they set for May 15.

That means that the executive order, which would end birthright citizenship for the children of undocumented immigrants and foreign residents, will remain paused in every state while the court considers the case.

The order was the latest response to a series of emergency applications brought by the Trump administration to challenge lower court blocks on a number of policies, including efforts to freeze more than a billion dollars in foreign aid and the deportation of Venezuelans to a prison in El Salvador without due process.

In three emergency applications, the Trump administration asked the Supreme Court to find that lower courts had erred in imposing bans on the birthright citizenship policy that extended beyond the parties involved in the litigation. It did not ask the court to weigh in on the constitutionality of that executive order, which was challenged soon after it was signed.

The court agreed to hear arguments on those applications, which focus on whether lower court judges went too far in imposing a nationwide pause on the policy.

On President Trump’s first day in office, he issued the executive order ending birthright citizenship, the guarantee that a person born in the United States is automatically a citizen, for certain children.

Birthright citizenship has long been considered a central tenet of the United States. The 14th Amendment, ratified after the Civil War, declares that “all persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside.”

In 1898, the Supreme Court affirmed that right in a landmark case, United States v. Wong Kim Ark, guaranteeing automatic citizenship for nearly all children born in the country. Since then, courts have upheld that expansive interpretation.

Got a news tip about the courts? If you have information to share about the Supreme Court or other federal courts, please contact us.
See how to send a secure message at nytimes.com/tips

Some allies of Mr. Trump have argued that the 14th Amendment should never have been interpreted to give citizenship to everyone born in the country. Among them: John Eastman, a constitutional law scholar and former Supreme Court law clerk who was one of the architects of the scheme to create fake slates of pro-Trump electors in states that Joseph R. Biden Jr. won in the 2020 election.

A number of legal challenges followed Mr. Trump’s executive order, and federal courts in Massachusetts, Maryland and Washington State issued temporary injunctions that put the order on hold for the entire country while courts considered the challenges.

Those temporary blocks, called nationwide injunctions, have been hotly debated for years, and the Trump administration focused its request to the Supreme Court as a challenge to such orders.

In a brief to the justices, Solicitor General D. John Sauer argued that nationwide injunctions were a relatively recent phenomenon that had a “dramatic upsurge” during the first Trump administration “followed by an explosion in the last three months.” Mr. Sauer argued that those blocks on policies exceeded lower courts’ authority and “gravely encroach on the president’s executive power” under the Constitution.
“This court’s intervention is urgently needed to restore the constitutional balance of separated powers,” Mr. Sauer wrote.
Lawyers for those challenging the executive order urged the justices to reject the government’s argument.

In a brief filed on behalf of Washington State, Arizona and Oregon, lawyers called the focus on nationwide injunctions a “myopic request” that “fails this court’s rules for granting a stay.”

“Being directed to follow the law as it has been universally understood for over 125 years is not an emergency warranting the extraordinary remedy of a stay,” the brief from the group of states said.

Abbie VanSickle covers the United States Supreme Court for The Times. She is a lawyer and has an extensive background in investigative reporting.

https://archive.ph/xh8eA

DougMacG

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Weaponized immigration; deportation, Sen. Chris Van Hollen
« Reply #2406 on: April 18, 2025, 06:41:19 AM »
https://townhall.com/tipsheet/mattvespa/2025/04/18/chris-van-hollens-latest-el-salvador-photo-inadvertently-captured-the-state-of-the-dems-n2655737

'I hope to someday find someone who looks at me with the love that Democrats feel toward violent gang member, wife beater, human trafficker Abrego Garcia.' And I didn't do any of those things.
« Last Edit: April 18, 2025, 06:43:54 AM by DougMacG »

ccp

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Re: Immigration; weaponized immigration; deportation
« Reply #2407 on: April 18, 2025, 06:48:25 AM »
I am trying to figure out the image

there are two

this one only has water and coffee cups:

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/immigration/chris-van-hollen-meets-kilmar-abrego-garcia-el-salvador-rcna201830

I assume the one with what does look like alcohol beverages must have been after the drinks were delivered to the table  :

https://x.com/nayibbukele/status/1913028548001923259/photo/3

We do see Van Hollen's seems full while Garcia's fluid level is lower suggesting he had some.   ordered to keep the restaurant happy?  or .....?  to party while travelling on our dime.
« Last Edit: April 18, 2025, 06:52:08 AM by ccp »

DougMacG

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Re: Immigration; weaponized immigration; deportation
« Reply #2408 on: April 18, 2025, 07:10:48 AM »
I also didn't understand a specific point to the pictures. Just that this is their new buddy, their new idol, their new George Floyd. As the comments suggest, he doesn't look persecuted or mistreated as he gets served in a nice restaurant. The check was paid by whom?

I searched the world wide web and can't find a picture of Chris Van Hollen eaching across the aisle breaking bread with President Trump, though I do see his friend Nancy Pelosi tearing up a state of the union speech.

Democrats hate our country is an opponent narrative they keep falling into. The ones I know do not hate our country but these are their leaders.

ccp

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Re: Immigration; weaponized immigration; deportation
« Reply #2409 on: April 18, 2025, 07:21:29 AM »
From article in previous post from Doug above:

"Biden embarked on a secret mission to Harvard University on Wednesday evening for a private meeting with 50 students.

It was an invite-only event, but pro-Palestinian protesters showed up and shouted, “Biden, Biden, you can’t hide. You’re committing genocide!”

Not surprising we hear very little on Cody Balmer who tried to kill Shapiro and his family by burning his house down.  He was a pro Palestinian advocate. Surely this played into his wanting to kill the Jewish governor who is pro Israel.

I think it was mentioned by CNN for a only a minute ,   but without  faux outrage played up by the MSM like they do with their endless George Floyd plays like Garcia. 

DougMacG

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Re: Immigration; weaponized immigration; deportation
« Reply #2410 on: April 18, 2025, 08:19:00 AM »
"pro-Palestinian protesters showed up and shouted, “Biden, Biden, you can’t hide. You’re committing genocide!” "

   - A side note out of this. Netanyahu believed that Biden was tying his hands, unsupportive of Israel. Pro Palestinians think Biden committed genocide. Biden is no longer relevant but the divide in the Democratic party is. The vocal, energetic part of the Democratic Party, including Harvard University for example, is pro palestinian, not pro-israel. They will not accept Shapiro for example, and his wing is believed to be the only electrical wing of the party.

That's a conundrum.




Crafty_Dog

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Abrego's tattoos
« Reply #2412 on: April 18, 2025, 11:26:21 AM »


ccp

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Trump held up image of Garcia's tatoo
« Reply #2414 on: April 19, 2025, 11:26:06 AM »
And added MS 13 on the image though he did not clarify that was added

https://www.mediaite.com/trump/trump-touts-seemingly-doctored-photo-of-abrego-garcias-hand-in-attempt-to-prove-maryland-man-is-gang-member/

just adding to the endless confusion giving libs opportunities

I do not know what to think  or conclude anymore

Endless back and forth and who to believe.

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Immigration; weaponized immigration; deportation
« Reply #2415 on: April 19, 2025, 11:45:59 AM »
Not the first time he has been careless with forwarding dubious memes.   Remember the Haitians eating cats and dogs in Ohio thing?

DougMacG

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75% of deportations under the Obama administration were nonjudicial removals
« Reply #2416 on: April 21, 2025, 12:04:18 AM »
https://x.com/DefiyantlyFree/status/1913820296882360344

75% of deportations under the Obama administration (2009–2017) were nonjudicial removals

Do you remember this controversy? Me neither.
« Last Edit: April 21, 2025, 12:09:00 AM by DougMacG »

DougMacG

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Chris Matthews on illegal immigration, 2006
« Reply #2417 on: April 21, 2025, 04:40:38 AM »
https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna12095410
"A country without borders is not a country.  If you don‘t have a border—I‘ve never heard of a country in the world that doesn‘t have a border.  That‘s what defines a country.  If you don‘t enforce it, you‘re a joke."
  - Chris matthews, NBC news, 2006

And now you're Hitler if you send them back. What happened?!
« Last Edit: April 21, 2025, 04:48:26 AM by Crafty_Dog »

ccp

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Re: Immigration; weaponized immigration; deportation
« Reply #2418 on: April 21, 2025, 06:50:00 AM »
"75% of deportations under the Obama administration (2009–2017) were nonjudicial removals

Do you remember this controversy? Me neither.
"

I distinctly recall the ALSU and SPLC were all over this with close linkups to the MSM reporting this in the headlines.

 :roll: :wink:

Body-by-Guinness

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NM Judge Quietly Retires After Tren de Aragua Houseguest Arrested
« Reply #2419 on: April 21, 2025, 08:14:55 AM »
Given all the hand wringing over "MD man," you'd think the press might be predisposed to latch on to the tale below, but alas it doesn't conform to the preferred MSM narrative:

It wasn’t easy tracking down this eye-popping story, which combined all the elements of the immigration debate— yet corporate media still ignored it. The Albuquerque Journal ran the astonishing article last week below the bland, uninformative headline, “Doña Ana County judge resigns after feds arrest man at home.” It was an all-American story about a small-town judge, a quiet, well-kept house, a nice, peaceful neighborhood— but while the judge’s wife was in the kitchen cooking dinner, a designated terrorist was out back polishing a suppressed AR-15.

image.png
On March 3rd, Las Cruces Magistrate Judge Jose Cano (D) quietly resigned from the bench after three re-elections since 2011. On the same day, prosecutors were down the street in federal district court arguing that a recent arrestee, a Venezuelan national named Christhian Lopez-Ortega, 23, was a Tren de Aragua gang member and a flight risk.

The two men’s connection defies belief.

Christhian was first caught crossing the border at Eagle Pass in December, 2023, but was freed three days later— due to overcrowding. This year, three days before Judge Cano tendered his letter of resignation, the El Paso Homeland Security Office, responding to an anonymous tip, raided the judge’s Las Cruces home and found the gang member living in the judge’s guest cottage, or what the locals call a casita.

Homeland Security officers nabbed Lopez-Ortega with a bunch of guns (a felony), and the family closed ranks, claiming the guns were owned by the Judge’s daughter, April. The government’s April 8th motion for reconsideration drily reported, “The Defendant admitted that he knew it was illegal for him to possess firearms.”

According to federal filings, Judge Cano’s liberal wife Nancy came upon the young man working construction and hired him to replace a glass door and do a couple odd jobs around the house. After Lopez-Ortega was evicted from his apartment, Nancy invited him to live with the family, and began driving him to his immigration appointments and his construction gigs.

No good reason for inviting a 23-year-old gang member into the family appears in any of the reports, leaving ample space for sordid speculation. Generously, the affluent middle-aged mom may have thought she just was helping “reform” the career gangster.

image 2.png
Investigators discovered some clues in Lopez-Ortega’s text messages. He called Nancy his “patrona,” which I believe is Venezuelan for “sugar momma.” One unidentified amigo asked Lopez-Ortega to get him “two grenades.” Another texted him a grisly murder scene photo showing decapitated victims with their hands cut off, a gruesome photo attached in full to Homeland’s motion, but which I will not reproduce here in close-up.

image 4.png
Troublingly, the local federal Magistrate judge overruled Lopez-Ortega’s bond, rebuffing federal prosecutors and saying something like, “I’m sure he’s okay if he’s living with Judge Cano.” The federal judge even tried to remit the gang member back into Nancy Cano’s custody.

That prompted the government’s attorneys to file an emergency motion for reconsideration, which has not yet been set for hearing.

🔥 This story involves two judges. The first, a sitting state judge embroiled in what appears at minimum to be a non-traditional relationship with a member of a designated terrorist organization, an illegal, gang-tattooed alien the Cano family shared everything with including their firearms, and a second local federal judge who in open court said he would release the man because he was friends with the first judge.

If this story came from Venezuela, it would surprise no one. But it’s from New Mexico.

This troubling tale has created a certain amount of buzz in local and social media, percolating just below corporate media’s veneered surface. If we had a functioning media, which we obviously do not, they would tell us how historically, the corruption of local judiciary is one of the first and most critical steps that cartel-style organizations take when consolidating soft territorial control.

image 3.png
Cartels are cagey, sly, and experienced. They don’t roll into a new area in hummers holding assault rifles. They quietly assimilate and get a read on the local judicial and law enforcement arena. Then they deploy a carrot and stick approach. They offer sweet bribes, called “plata” (silver), sometimes cloaked as gifts or brokered with third parties. And, for judges who don’t take bribes, they offer quiet threats, called “plomo” (lead): you don’t want to deny bail on a TdA hermano.

Plata or plomo. Silver or lead.

The cartels realize that the judicial bench is the choke point. There are only a handful of judges in each locale, so controlling even one through plato or plomo makes a measurable difference. Control the judiciary, and you effectively control law enforcement. It’s not just a cartel thing, it’s an organized crime tactic. You can find similar examples in the 1980’s mafia and the 1930’s Chicago mobsters.

The cartels are just the tactic’s most recent incarnation.

🔥 In other words, this suppressed story is narrative dynamite. It is a much more threatening example than that MS-13 moron down in CECOT. Here, we have a U.S. judge literally living under the same roof with a violent, illegal alien gang member (if requests for grenades and snuff photos of gang killings aren’t enough evidence of violent inclination, then I don’t know what to tell you). And we see a second judge in a completely different courthouse running cover for the first judge.

But here, the media could care less about Christhian Lopez-Garcia’s deportation battle.

Here’s a link to the government’s motion for reconsideration, but note that some of the final attachments are graphic.

Thus, we begin to see the abolition of the judiciary. And over the weekend, the Supreme Court made things much, much, worse. Or more interesting, depending how you look at it.

https://www.coffeeandcovid.com/p/habeas-corpses-monday-april-21-2025

Body-by-Guinness

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MS 13 MD Man's Saga, Explained
« Reply #2420 on: April 22, 2025, 02:37:51 PM »
A lawyer does a linear walkthrough of the facts surrounding "MD Man's" deportation. Suffice to say the left's histrioics don't survive this scrutiny, but then when do they ever?

https://shipwreckedcrew.substack.com/p/dancing-on-the-head-of-a-pin-for?r=1qo1e&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=email&triedRedirect=true

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Immigration; weaponized immigration; deportation
« Reply #2421 on: April 22, 2025, 03:53:20 PM »
Looks to be very good, but the site is not letting me do the freebie thing and see the whole article.

Body-by-Guinness

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Re: Immigration; weaponized immigration; deportation
« Reply #2422 on: April 23, 2025, 04:32:46 AM »
Looks to be very good, but the site is not letting me do the freebie thing and see the whole article.

Whups, forgot I’m a subscriber:

Dancing On The Head Of A Pin For An MS-13 Member -- The Problem Is Small And The Solution Is Simple
The vexing issue is the insistence by an Article III Judge that she can dictate to the Article II Executive how to correct the problem under threat of judicial sanction.
SHIPWRECKEDCREW
APR 22, 2025
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Let me begin with one observation — the Opinion issued on April 6, 2025, by District of Maryland District Judge Xinis is an over-the-top diatribe that parrots every claim made by the advocates for Hilmar Abrego Garcia as if they were truths etched in stone tablets. She recites the allegations set forth in the Complaint as if they have been litigated and resolved, ignoring the fact that there is much in the Complaint that is contrary to the VERY LIMITED EVIDENCE that was before her.

She held a hearing on April 4, 2025, and at the conclusion of the hearing she granted the plaintiffs’ motion for injunctive relief. The Opinion explaining her decision was published two days later.

But the hearing took place one day after District Judge Boasberg in D.C., 39 miles away, held a very contentious hearing in the matter involving the invocation of the Alien Enemies Act and removal of a large number of members of the Tren de Aragua (TdA) criminal gang based in Venezuela, seemingly in violation of his prior injunction. During the TdA hearing, Judge Boasberg’s comments certainly suggested he thought the Administration has intentionally violated his order — later determined to have been made without jurisdiction — that everyone being removed pursuant to the proclamation needed to be returned to the United States.

Judge Xinis is presiding over a case where the Administration admitted that Abrego Garcia was placed on one of those planes — not under the AEA proclamation but because he was an illegal alien with a final Order of Removal — due to an “administrative error.” In 2019 an Immigration Judge had granted Abrego Garcia “Withholding of Removal” that prevented him from being deported back to his home country, El Salvador. Judge Xinis had ORDERED the Administration to “facilitate and effectuate” the return of Abrego Garcia to the United States —whatever that means — setting the deadline for Monday, April 7, at 11:59 pm.

Both Tren de Aragua and MS-13 — the gang affiliation of Abrego Garcia, which is not in serious doubt as set forth herein — have been declared “terrorist organizations” by the Trump Administration pursuant to a federal statute giving it the authority to do so, whether district judges like it or not.

There is nothing about the process leading to Hilmar Abrego Garcia’s return to El Salvador that is hard to understand. One error was made – but the nature of that error is such that events that predated his deportation back to El Salvador have made it harmless. Below is the entire saga in story-book form – details coming from various police and court records — followed by an explanation of the very simple solution along with the political reason why this simple solution is turning out to be so difficult to put in place.

Abrego Garcia, along with three others, were detained by Maryland local police on March 28, 2019. One detective immediately recognized one of the four as an MS-13 member — “Bimbo” — known to him from previous contacts. That individual had been encountered multiple times by the “Prince Georges County Gang Unit MS-13 Intelligence Squad.” The MS-13 problem is so bad they have an entire Gang Unit with its own Intelligence Squad dedicated to identifying and investigating MS-13 members. “Bimbo” has an extensive criminal record with multiple convictions.

A second individual – not confirmed as an MS-13 member – had tattoos indicative of Hispanic gang membership. Eyes, ears, and mouths covered by skulls which are meant to emphasize “see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil” and communicate the need to stay silent. A past proven and reliable source of information identified this second person as an MS-13 member with the gang name of “Maniaco.” This individual also had a calf tattoo known to represent high level MS-13 members.

Abrego Garcia was wearing a Chicago Bulls hat – images of a bull’s head with horns is indicative of an MS-13 member in good standing. The same source of information identified Abrego Garcia as an MS-13 member with the gang name “Chele”

Of interest, however, is that the fourth individual was not known to the police or the source of information as an MS-13 member. If, as has been suggested, this source of information was not reliable and had fabricated the information about Abrego Garcia being a member of MS-13, why did he not fabricate information about the 4th individual who, according to the report, was released at the scene.

All of those details come from the Maryland local police who encountered the four men.

Abergo Garcia freely admitted to being a Salvadoran citizen in the United States illegally, and he was turned over to the custody by ICE -- there is an ICE Form I-213 dated March 28, 2019, completed the same evening by two ICE agents. On March 29 he was given a Notice to Appear at a Removal Hearing, and was detained in custody by DHS pending that hearing. The I-213 states it was the Prince Georges County Police Gang Unit who first encountered the four when they were “detained in connection with a murder investigation.” This wasn’t a random police contact – it was the Gang Unit contacting known gang members. It doesn’t say they were suspects in a murder, only that they were detained in connection with an investigation. The I-213 says in multiple locations that Abrego Garcia is an MS-13 member – based on the information given to ICE by the local police Gang Unit dedicated to MS-13.

Abrego Garcia was denied bond after a hearing on April 24, 2019. In the written Memorandum dated May 22, 2019, documenting the denial of the motion, the Immigration Judge stated:

“[T]he determination that the Respondent is a gang member appears to be trustworthy and is supported by other evidence in the record, namely, information contained in the Gang Field Interview Sheet…. [T]he fact that a “past, proven, and reliable source of information” verified [Abrego Garcia’s] gang membership, rank, and gang name is sufficient to support that the Respondent is a gang member….”

The “determination” was made by the Maryland police and adopted by ICE. These are not casual decisions made by the flip of a coin. Accurately identifying gang affiliations is a paramount concern when it comes to arrest/detention/ incarceration. Having members of rival and hostile gangs housed together is an invitation to widespread violence. So accurately determining gang affiliation is the reason why police have gang unit “Intelligence Squads.” To dismiss this determination — as Judge Xinis does in almost comical fashion in her April 6 Opinion for this poor “Maryland Man” — only exposes ignorance as to how and why these determinations are made.

The Board of Immigration Appeals, in a written decision December 19, 2019, adopted and affirmed the Immigration Judge’s decision denying bond to Abrego Garcia on the basis of his status as an MS-13 member.

“[Abrego-Garcia] argues that the Immigration Judge clearly erred in determining that is a verified member of MS-13 because there is no reliable evidence in the record to support such a finding…. We adopt and affirm the Immigration Judge’s danger ruling…. [T]he immigration judge appropriately considered allegations of gang affiliation against the respondent in determining that he has not demonstrated that he is not a danger to property or persons.”

“Gang affiliation” is not a “crime.” So the claim that Abrego Garcia has never been charged with a crime where his gang affiliation was “proven” in court is meaningless. I suspect the Immigration Judge who made the initial FACTUAL FINDING, and the Board of Appeals panel who affirmed that “FACTUAL FINDING” have reviewed far more MS-13 determinations made in this fashion than has Judge Xinis from the district court bench.

Between his arrest and the denial of his bond appeal, Abrego Garcia filed an application for relief from the Order of Removal under three separate provisions of immigration law. First, he asked for asylum, which would have allowed him to lawfully remain in the United States if granted. Second, he asked for protection under the Convention Against Torture (CAT), a U.N. convention that is limited to fear with regard to the government of the country where the alien would otherwise be removed. The Immigration Judge who conducted the hearing denied both his asylum claim and his CAT claim.

But he made a third claim asking for “Withholding of Removal” which prevents deportation back to the alien’s home country if the alien can show a “well-founded fear of persecution” based on religion, ethnicity, etc. One of the classifications recognized in the statute is fear of persecution based on membership in a “particular social group.”

With several months to rehearse the story, Abrego Garcia testified to an almost comical claim that his family’s business – making and selling pupusas from the kitchen of their house (“everyone in town knew to get their pupusa from Pupuseria Cecelia”) – was extorted by a El Salvadoran gang, Barrio 18. The family was given the choice to either pay the extortion on the pupusa sales or the gang would take their son(s) and force them to join the gang. Initially the demand was for Abrego-Garcia’s older brother to join so the family arranged for the older brother to leave for the U.S. Agrego Garcia claimed the family moved from one neighborhood in the capitol San Salvador to another neighborhood 10 minutes away by car. But the gang tracked them down and continued to demand payment or it would force Abrego Garcia — then about 16 — to join. The family moved again, this time 15 minutes farther away by car – but Barrio 18 would just not be denied. They would either have their pupuseria money or Abrego Garcia would join their gang. In response, the family sent him to the U.S. as well.

If you don’t know, pupusas are a stuffed handheld pancake-like street food that are the national dish of El Salvador. Street venders are ubiquitous in Salvadoran towns. The idea that one family’s kitchen would be “the place” to get pupusas is just idiotic beyond belief. It would be like saying “Everyone on Staten Island knew to get their cheesesteak sandwiches at Betty Smith’s house.”

Abrego Garcia told the Immigration Judge in 2019 that he feared being attacked and/or killed by Barrio 18 if he were to be returned to El Salvador – seven years after he left. The judge accepted the story and granted him “Withholding of Removal” – WOR – preventing him from being deported to El Salvador. He could be sent anywhere else, just not back to his home country.

Whether the judge believed the story or not, granting WOR is a backdoor way to get around the one-year limit on applying for asylum – and everyone in the business knows that. That is why ridiculous stories like the one told by Abrego Garcia are invented. Entering an order that a Salvadoran national can’t be sent back to El Salvador creates a significant complication in deporting him at all because a third country needs to agree to take him — a member of MS-13 as determined by the U.S. government.

On the same day he was granted WOR, it appears that he was released from detention. There doesn’t seem to be any document that explains the rationale for releasing Abrego Garcia given that his status as an MS-13 member was used to detain him in the first instance, and that that decision was later affirmed by the Board of Immigration Appeals.

But, informed speculation based on events and the statutes for holding him in custody suggests that a rather simple explanation is likely. Under the statutes governing detention pending deportation, there is a 90 day period within which an alien is to be removed after a final Order of Removal is granted.

Title 8 U.S.C. Sec. 1231(a)(1)(A) states that an alien subject to an Order of Removal shall be removed within 90 days, and shall remain detained during that period.

That period may be extended an additional 90 days if the alien fails to make a “timely application in good faith for travel” or otherwise acts in ways to prevent his removal. He shall remain in custody during that second 90 day period.

There are some provisions in this statute for keeping certain specific classes of individuals in detention until removal is arranged. But, outside those narrow classes the statute provides for release from detention when removal within the statutory period — 6 months total — cannot be accomplished.

When Abrego Garcia was granted WOR to El Salvador, he had been in custody for almost 6 months after his Order of Removal was final. The timing of his release in relationship to that 6 month period, is the best explanation for his release from detention. In Zadvydas v. Davis the Supreme Court held in 2001 that when the date of removal is not “reasonably foreseeable”, continued detention of an alien subject to removal was unconstitutional. So, for Abrego Garcia, indefinite detention while trying to arrange for his removal to a country other than El Salvador, was not an option. After Joe Biden took office, the Biden DOJ had no interest in deporting anyone. That explains why Abrego Garcia was able to “build a life as a Maryland Dad” while being an illegal alien subject to removal for the past 4 years.

There is one more important fact to consider in terms of the WOR with regard to Abrego Garcia, as well as the determination that he is a member of MS-13. In the Complaint filed by his attorneys in the District of Maryland, there is the following allegations in Paragraph 53, at p. 11-12:

The evening after his arrest, [Abrego Garcia’s wife] received a call from Plaintiff Abrego Garcia…. During that conversation, Plaintiff Abrego Garcia informed [his wife] that he was being questioned about gang affiliations. He repeatedly informed his interviewers that he was never a gang member and had no gang affiliations. He was shown several photos where he appeared in public, and asked about other people in those photos, but was unable to provide any information on them, as he did not know them or anything about them.”

So on March 14, 2025, ICE already possessed photographs of him with other individuals in public places and asked him for information about the people he was with while showing him the photographs?

Who thinks those pictures were taken at gatherings of ex-pat Salvadorans to discuss the happenings back in the home country while celebrating their shared cultural heritage?

Most readers here with experience in law enforcement will recognize this as being 100% consistent with innumerable accounts of criminal investigations where law enforcement is trying to gather additional intelligence on individuals of interest. When interviewing a documented MS-13 member who is an illegal alien from El Salvador, who are the subjects most likely to be in the photographs with Abrego Garcia that ICE would in interested in?

Based on experience, what is the most likely response to be given by an MS-13 member when shown photographs of himself with other MS-13 members, and asked for information about the others in the photos — “I don’t know anything about those people”??

Exactly.

The idea that Abrego Garcia’s A-File — all illegal aliens who go through removal have an A-File — only had the 2019 reports as evidence of his MS-13 membership is laughable. The top enforcement priority for ICE staring January 21 was removal of Tren de Aragua and MS-13 members who had come into the country illegally. Every ICE Office would have prioritized their targets based on their own files. They didn’t just pick Abrego Garcia’s name out of a hat. The fact that Prince Georges County has an MS-13 Gang Unit is highly suggestive of the fact that Prince Georges County has an MS-13 gang problem.

Now lets turn to the issue of how to correct the problem of sending Abrego Garcia to the one country on the planet he could not be sent to with the WOR in place.

A different subsection of the same statute cited above — 8 U.S.C. Sec. 1231 — sets for the standard for granting that WOR status that was given to Abrego Garcia. But the process for revisiting a prior granting of WOR status is set forth in the regulations that have been adopted by DOJ for proceedings in Immigration Courts. These are found in Title 8 of the Code of Federal Regulations.

Withholding of Removal is not necessarily a permanent protected status. A change in circumstances in the country for which Withholding was granted is a basis to reopen the matter. If the reasons for fearing retribution if returned to a particular country cease to exist, the WOR for that country can be removed by way of a motion to reopen. As noted above, fear of retribution by the Barrio 18 gang was the reason for withholding removal to El Salvador in 2019. If the Trump Administration establishes that Barrio 18 is no longer the threat it was in 2019 — and it is not — the WOR status could be revoked in a proper hearing conducted for that purpose.

But, more signficantly for Abrego Garcia, the statute granting him WOR has a significant exception that now applies to him. Pursuant to 8 U.S.C. Sec. 1231(b)(3)(B)(iv) — WOR is not available to an illegal alien when:

there are reasonable grounds to believe that the alien is a danger to the security of the United States.

The designation of MS-13 as a “terrorist organization” provides the basis for removing Abrego Garcia’s WOR protection — IF he is an MS-13 member. The standard — established by a statute passed by Congress and signed by a prior President — is “reasonable grounds to believe.” It is not “beyond a reasonable doubt” or “preponderance of the evidence.” It is much closer to what is recognized in other contexts as “probable cause” which also turns on a “reasonableness” standard and not a weighing of evidence.

This is underpinned by a basic judicial principle that is not being given enough consideration by those yammering back and forth over this subject — illegal aliens with no right to remain in the United States are not entitled to the same
”due process” rights as citizens EXCEPT in circumstances where they are charged with a crime and the government is seeking to imprison them as punishment for that crime.

Finally, how would this motion to reopen be made to happen? It is a hearing and it must happen before an Immigration Judge who would make the decision.

But NOTHING I have found leads to the conclusion that the hearing requires Abrego Garcia’s in-person appearance in the United States. Under 18 U.S.C. Sec. 1229a(b)(2), immigration hearings may be conducted via video or teleconference.

One exception requiring consent by the alien to a video or teleconference is when the hearing is for the purpose of considering evidence. But, given the proceedings that have already taken place with Abrego Garcia present in Maryland, both grounds for removing his WOR status can be asserted without his in-person appearance back in the United States.

First, as to his membership in MS-13, regardless of the various legalistic claims that the findings during his two bail hearings are not sufficient, such claims are nonsense because the doctrine of “collateral estoppel” applies. It is a legal doctrine that prevents a party from relitigating an issue that was resolved in a previous lawsuit or administrative proceeding, even if the issue relates to a different claim in the new matter. The requirements are only that the issue was part of the final determination in the earlier proceeding, and the issue was raised and decided with both parties having had a chance to present evidence and argument on the issue.

Whether Abrego Garcia was an MS-13 member was squarely before the Immigration Judge and the Bureau of Immigration Appeals. The government presented the evidence of his affiliation and Abrego Garcia denied being a member and offered evidence to the contrary. The fact that Abrego Garcia had the burden of proof in that setting is irrelevant to the question of whether the matter was squarely before the judge, Abrego Garcia contested the issue, and the issue was decided. The decision does not say he was denied bail because he failed to carry his burden of proof that he was not a danger to the community — it says the evidence of his membership in MS-13 established he was a danger to the community:

After considering the information provided by both parties, the Court concluded that no bond was appropriate in this matter. The Court first reasoned that the Respondent failed to meet his burden of demonstrating that his release from custody would not pose a danger to others, as the evidence shows that he is a verified member of MS-13.”

Since “collateral estoppel” is a legal issue and does not require any new evidentiary determination, a hearing to assert his membership in MS-13 as a basis for removal of his WOR status can be conducted by video/teleconference.

But, even if the application of collateral estoppel is disputed, ICE regulations provide that an Immigration Judge may conduct a hearing by video or teleconference to consider or review “credible fear determinations” without the consent of the alien. 8 C.F.R. Sec. 1003.25(c).

Telephonic or video hearings. An Immigration Judge may conduct hearings through video conference to the same extent as he or she may conduct hearings in person. An Immigration Judge may also conduct a hearing through a telephone conference, but an evidentiary hearing on the merits may only be conducted through a telephone conference with the consent of the alien involved … except that credible fear determinations may be reviewed by the Immigration Judge through a telephone conference without the consent of the alien.

If the changed circumstances in El Salvador with respect to Barrio 18 are such that there is no longer a basis for finding a “credible fear of persecution” at the hands of that gang, that issue can be heard and resolved by an Immigration Judge through a telephone conference without Abrego-Garcia’s consent to proceed in that fashion.

So there is a simple solution to fixing the WOR problem that does not require Abrego Garcia being returned to the United States. These proceedings are through the Immigration Court that is part of the Executive Branch, and over which the Article III district courts have been divested of jurisdiction by the Congress. Judge Xinis has no authority to interfere in this process if DOJ chooses to revisit the WOR benefit in this fashion. Abrego Garcia would have a right to appeal the outcome to the Board of Immigration Appeals and then to the Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit. Both could be done on his behalf without his presence in the United States.

The only remaining hurdle is a political one — the Administration seems unwilling to proceed in a manner that could be construed as acknowledging the validity of the Order from Judge Xinis. It seems intent on continuing to contest the legal validity of the order itself, as well as the sufficiency of the the language of the Order following the Supreme Court’s earlier intervention directing her to provide more clear guidance — which she thereafter declined to offer.

I predicted last week when this issue turned volatile that the Administration would fix the error involving Abrego Garcia, but it would not do so in response to a judicial order that it act in any specific manner in correcting the error. This is an Executive error, subject to correction through administrative processes in the Executive branch, and involving a subject matter that is within the exclusive authority of the Executive. It is going to resolve it in that manner without conceding that the Article III district court has any role to play.

Crafty_Dog

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FO: ICE tracking illegals use of money apps
« Reply #2423 on: April 23, 2025, 09:26:50 AM »


(5) ACLU: ICE USING MONEY APPS TO TARGET ILLEGALS: The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) said the Trump administration is using information from money transfer apps to obtain personal information on illegal aliens, which the ACLU said is an illegal violation of privacy and human rights.

The ACLU said ICE is also using Arizona-based Transaction Records Analysis Center (TRAC) data to track illegal immigrants’ money transfers between Mexico and southwest states, and to access illegal immigrants’ location information.

Why It Matters: This is likely a prelude to the Trump administration attempting to ramp up deportations. So far, deportation operations have been slow-going due to lack of federal resources, and state and local efforts to block cooperation with ICE. The Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) was also given access to Internal Revenue Service and Executive Office for Immigration Review Court and Appeals System data, which the Trump administration is likely to leverage in immigration enforcement operations. - R.C.