Summary

  • A man who was mistakenly deported to El Salvador in March has been returned to the US to face federal criminal charges

  • Kilmar Ábrego García has been accused of participating in a trafficking conspiracy over several years

  • At a press conference on Friday, Attorney General Pam Bondi confirmed he had landed in the US

  • Ábrego García played a "significant role" in smuggling illegal immigrants on more than 100 trips throughout the country, Bondi says

  • His lawyer calls the charges "preposterous", adding: "What happened today is an abuse of power"

  1. Kilmar Ábrego García is back in the US facing smuggling chargespublished at 23:52 British Summer Time 6 June

    Kilmar Ábrego García  wearing a black top, black hat with a bull on and silver chainImage source, Reuters/ Abrego Garcia Family

    Kilmar Ábrego García is set to appear in court later today after being returned to the US to face immigrant smuggling charges.

    Here are where things stand currently:

    • The 29-year-old is set to be charged with "alien smuggling and conspiracy to commit alien smuggling" after a grand jury indictment
    • The US Attorney General Pam Bondi says Ábrego García is "a danger to our community"
    • Ábrego García's lawyers say they and his family learned about his return "on ABC News," and called the charges against him "preposterous"
    • The White House says his return has nothing to do with his mistaken deportation and say he's only come back to the US because "a new investigation has revealed crimes SO HEINOUS...only the American Justice System could hold him fully accountable"
    • His wife, Jennifer Vasquez Sura, feels "mixed emotions" - his lawyer says. She says Vasquez Sura is happy that he is back on US soil, although it's under "very egregious" circumstances
    • Ábrego García's return will reveal details about his treatment at the notorious El Salvador prison Cecot, another of his lawyers says

    We're ending our live coverage but with more developments to come, follow along here for the latest updates.

  2. Here is what US politicians are saying about the casepublished at 23:49 British Summer Time 6 June

    US politicians have been divided in their response to the return of Ábrego García. Democrats cast it as a victory for due process while Republicans commented on the smuggling charges announced by prosecutors against him.

    Maryland's US Senator Angela Alsobrooks, a Democrat, said Ábrego García "should not have been deported. Even the Supreme Court demanded this President follow the law and return him to the U.S. It is right that due process will be afforded to him."

    Fellow Democratic Representative Jasmine Crockett of Missouri said of the return: "The GOP broke the law to deport this man—then decided to indict him ... This is Trump’s America: lawless, reckless, and cruel."

    Republican Alabama Senator Katie Britt reposted a version of the charges against Ábrego García She added: This is who Democrats are fighting for. This is who Senate Republicans are fighting to protect American families from."

    Republican Representative Brandon Gill of Texas said this was part of a Democrat strategy.

    "Liberals want illegal aliens to stay in our country and be given amnesty, so that they can then vote Democrat."

    Glenn Ivey, a Democrat from Maryland, rebuffed the accusations and said advocacy for Ábrego García's return wasn't about him personally. "I went to El Salvador and advocated for Kilmar's return because he was entitled to due process under our constitution," he said. "Kilmar will now get his day in court. I hope he receives the fair trial that he is guaranteed."

  3. Analysis

    Analysis: The White House is hitting two birds with one stonepublished at 23:43 British Summer Time 6 June

    Jake Kwon
    North America correspondent

    The Justice Department says Kilmar Ábrego García's return today makes moot the standing legal challenges to return him.

    A cloud has been hanging over the Trump administration since US courts ordered them to bring Ábrego García back to the United States. President Trump stonewalled the order, which pushed the country toward a constitutional crisis.

    By bringing Ábrego García back for the purpose of prosecution, Trump avoids the appearance that he's bending to the court's demands while also resolving the legal stalemate.

    At the same time, we saw the White House daring Democrats and the so-called "fake news media" to defend the man that they are accusing of being a violent human trafficker and an abuser of women and children.

    However, Trump's critics have been reminding the White House that the matter was never about whether Ábrego García is guilty of crimes - it has been about him getting a chance to defend himself and being given due process in the US courts.

  4. President Trump on case: 'It's a disaster...this was a pretty bad guy'published at 23:30 British Summer Time 6 June

    Bernd Debusmann Jr
    Reporting from Air Force One

    Trump speaking to reporters aboard Air Force OneImage source, Reuters

    We're now getting some comments from President Trump about Ábrego García's return.

    Speaking to the press, Trump declines to say if he had spoken to the president of El Salvador to facilitate the return, or whether it was his own call.

    "He should have never have had to be returned, if you take a look at what they found in the grand jury," Trump says.

    "It's a disaster, a whole disaster when you look at him with his antics. For the Democrats who backed him, this was not the man from Maryland," the president continues.

    "This was a pretty bad guy," Trump adds.

  5. Ábrego García's attorney tells BBC that he and his family are 'everyday people' who are being politicisedpublished at 23:28 British Summer Time 6 June

    Media caption,

    Watch: Abrego Garcia’s family trying to contact with him, lawyer tells BBC

    Chris Newman, one of the attorneys for Ábrego García and his family, is speaking with the BBC and outlines they are relieved in a way that at least he is back in the US and now the government will be forced to prove their case. He says Ábrego García will have the chance now to "defend himself" both in court and in public opinion.

    "Kilmar and his family are just everyday people," he says. "To be the subject of this type of cruelty and this type of politicalisation and scapegoating is something that one could not imagine."

    He said the right to due process is integral to the US courts system and argues the Trump administration was demonising immigrants as a way of "arrogating authoritarian power". He said this type of case has implications for everyone.

  6. White House deputy chief of staff says 'new evidence' brought Garcia backpublished at 22:54 British Summer Time 6 June

    The White House's deputy chief of staff, Stephen Miller, has written a number of posts on X within the last hour about the case.

    In one, he reposts the Van Hollen statement we brought you earlier.

    Responding, Miller writes: "There is no more 'process' for deporting a crim alien with a final removal order, no matter how much he is admired by Dems. He’s here because new evidence has resulted in a massive criminal indictment.

    "He will be tried, jailed and then deported again to El Salvador."

    Sharing a separate post detailing a previous court motion, Miller calls Garcia a "monster" and an "illegal predator".

    As a reminder, Miller had been one of the architects of Trump's immigration policies, including the travel ban during Trump's first term in office.

  7. Judge ordered some documents relating to case to be made public earlier this weekpublished at 22:45 British Summer Time 6 June

    The return of Garcia today follows shortly after a federal judge ordered certain documents relating to the case to be unsealed earlier this week, external.

    The order was filed on Wednesday by District Judge Paula Xinis in response to a motion brought by a number of different media outlets to unseal court records relating to the case. One of the documents will still have redactions.

    The United States Department of Homeland Security had put forward arguments of national security and preventing the dissemination of national security.

  8. Ábrego García's return has 'nothing to do with' mistaken deportation - White Housepublished at 22:36 British Summer Time 6 June

    More now from the White House, where the deputy press secretary has said Ábrego García's return has "nothing to do with his original deportation".

    "There was no mistake," Abigail Jackson continues in a post on X.

    She adds: "He's returning because a new investigation has revealed crimes SO HEINOUS, committed in the US, that only the American Justice System could hold him fully accountable."

    • As a reminder: The Trump administration previously admitted the 29-year-old's deportation was an "administrative error".
  9. Ábrego García's wife has 'mixed emotions', lawyer sayspublished at 22:33 British Summer Time 6 June

    Ama Frimpong is up again, who says Ábrego García's family were not told about his return to the US in advance and his wife Jennifer Vasquez Sura learned about it in the press.

    She says Vasquez Sura feels "mixed emotions" - she is happy that he is back on US soil, although its under "very egregious" circumstances.

    "He should not be held in a prison in Tennessee," she adds, but at home with his family.

    It's “imperative that communication be established immediately," says Frimpong, adding that she wants to hear her husband's voice.

  10. Legal team says they learnt of charges in the mediapublished at 22:27 British Summer Time 6 June

    Simon Sandoval Moshenburg says he and the rest of Ábrego García's legal team learnt of the new charges against their client and his return to the US "just like everyone else" - on ABC News.

    He says he understands there will be a hearing this afternoon and a longer hearing at a later date.

  11. Ábrego García reportedly in good healthpublished at 22:23 British Summer Time 6 June

    Mosheburg now tells those listening that lawyers have not had any updates regarding Ábrego García's physical and mental wellbeing - but that the latest report was that he was in good health.

    A little earlier, lawyers said "bad treatment" he suffered while in jail in El Salvador will now come to light.

  12. Ábrego García will reveal experience in notorious prison, lawyer sayspublished at 22:20 British Summer Time 6 June

    Moshenberg says Ábrego García's return will reveal details about his treatment in El Salvador.

    He says he is confident Ábrego García will not be convicted, but even if he is, a judge's order still prevents him from being returned to El Salvador.

    Moshenberg continues that Ábrego García is one of the first people to leave Cecot, the notorious prison in El Salvador where he was being held.

    The revelations will "strengthen his case that he can't be sent back to that prison where he will be tortured," he says.

    "It's going to be very interesting to hear how the Trump administration can justify sending people to that prison once Kilmar call tell people about the experiences that he suffered there."

  13. Lawyers concerned about Ábrego García's constitutional rightspublished at 22:16 British Summer Time 6 June

    We're now hearing from Chris Newman, one of the family's lawyers.

    He says the Trump administration has lodged a case in the court of public opinion, presenting "no evidence" of allegations against him, and that he is concerned Ábrego García may not get a fair trial.

    He adds that he is particularly concerned his constitutional rights are not being respected.

    Newman goes on to say the White House is treating Ábrego García "the same way" it treats "all non-white immigrants - as if guilty until proven innocent".

  14. 'Let him talk to his wife and children', lawyer urgespublished at 22:11 British Summer Time 6 June

    Next up is Ama Frimpong, another of Ábrego García's lawyers, who says he needs to have contact with his family.

    For three months his wife and children have been wondering when their loved one will come home, she says.

    She adds that the government is still "delaying reunification", still "play[ing] games".

    "Let him talk to his wife and children," she continues, adding that the family has "suffered enough".

  15. Ábrego García charges are 'preposterous', lawyer sayspublished at 22:07 British Summer Time 6 June

    Kilmar Ábrego García's lawyers are now responding to his return to the US to face criminal charges.

    Simon Sandoval Moshenberg starts first, calling the events an "abuse of power" and the "exact opposite" of due process. He says Ábrego García should have been allowed due process before he was punished and sent abroad.

    This matter could have "gone away" had the Trump administration admitted it made a mistake in deporting Ábrego García in the first place, he says.

    He calls the charges "preposterous".

    He says Ábrego García will vigorously defend himself.

  16. 'The administration had the ability to bring him back' - Ábrego García's lawyerpublished at 22:02 British Summer Time 6 June

    "Today’s action proves what we’ve known all along - that the administration had the ability to bring him back and just refused to do so," Ábrego García's lawyer Andrew Rossman has said in a statement according to the Reuters news agency.

    His attorneys are planning a news conference that is set to begin in a moment.

    His lawyers have previously argued that he has never been convicted of any criminal offence, including gang membership, in the US or in El Salvador.

    His wife, Jennifer Vasquez Sura, has also denied he is a MS-13 gang member and described him as "a loving partner and father".

    Although since he was deported it came to light that Sura had filed a protective order petition against him in 2021, alleging that he had physically attacked her on multiple occasions. She said in a later statement that she had decided not to follow through with the court process at the time.

  17. El Salvador president: No more margaritas under custodypublished at 22:00 British Summer Time 6 June

    Nayib Bukele waving to someone in the distance with a press photographer taking a photo behind himImage source, Reuters

    President of El Salvador Nayib Bukele has written on X following the news about Garcia's return.

    He says:

    Quote Message

    As I said in the Oval Office: 1. I would never smuggle a terrorist into the United States. 2. ⁠I would never release a gang member onto the streets of El Salvador. That said, we work with the Trump administration, and if they request the return of a gang member to face charges, of course we wouldn’t refuse. No more margaritas under custody

    Nayib Bukele, President of El Salvador

    The mention of margaritas is a nod to when Democratic Sen Van Hollen visited Ábrego García in the country. The senator said members of El Salvador's government facilitated the visit and he accused them of setting up some type of tropical drink in front of them during the visit. The senator said neither he or Ábrego García ordered or drank them.

  18. 'This is not about the man, it’s about his constitutional rights' - Sen Van Hollenpublished at 21:54 British Summer Time 6 June

    Senator Chris Van Hollen - who visited Kilmar Ábrego García in El Salvador in April - has released a statement now that he has returned.

    “For months the Trump Administration flouted the Supreme Court and our Constitution. Today, they appear to have finally relented to our demands for compliance with court orders and with the due process rights afforded to everyone in the United States," he says.

    The Maryland senator continues: "As I have repeatedly said, this is not about the man, it’s about his constitutional rights – and the rights of all."

    "The administration will now have to make its case in the court of law, as it should have all along.”

    Chris Van Hollen wearing a blue shirt and shirt jacket sitting at a table speak to Kilmar Ábrego García, who is wearing a checked shirt and a capImage source, Reuters
    Image caption,

    Senator Chris Van Hollen visited Kilmar Ábrego García in his El Salvador prison in April

  19. White House: Ábrego García to meet 'full force of American justice'published at 21:48 British Summer Time 6 June

    The White House press secretary has just released a statement about the indictment against Ábrego García. She says the charges prove "the unhinged Democrat Party was wrong, and their stenographers in the Fake News Media were once again played like fools".

    In a statement on X, Karoline Leavitt calls him an "illegal alien terrorist, gang member, and human trafficker".

    She says he will now return to the US to "meet the full force of American justice".

  20. Here's what we know so farpublished at 21:36 British Summer Time 6 June

    Pam Bondi speaking at the Department of Justice, with Todd Blanche to her rightImage source, Pool

    In the past few hours, news of the return of Maryland man Kilmar Ábrego García - who was mistakenly deported to El Salvador - began circulating.

    Since then, Attorney General Pam Bondi has given an update. She says:

    • Kilmar Ábrego Garcia has "landed in the United States to face justice"
    • He will be charged with "alien smuggling and conspiracy to commit alien smuggling" after a grand jury indictment
    • After Ábrego García serves his sentence in the US - if convicted of any crimes - he will then return to El Salvador, which was agreed with El Salvador's president
    • Bondi says the grand jury found that Ábrego García had played a "significant role" in an alien smuggling ring
    • These facts demonstrate Ábrego García is a danger to our community,” she says, after claiming - without evidence - that co-conspirators allege he was involved in a murder