El Salvador's Bukele won't return MS-13 gang member mistakenly deported to his country
Kilmar Abrego Garcia was deported by the Trump administration by mistake, though the Supreme Court ruled that the administration must facilitate his return.
President Donald Trump on Monday declined to ask El Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele to return an El Salvadoran citizen whom authorities mistakenly deported. Bukele, for his part, suggested that to return the man to the U.S. would be to smuggle a terrorist into the United States and that he would not do so.
Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a citizen of El Salvador, was deported by the Trump administration by mistake, though the Supreme Court ruled that the administration must facilitate his return. During an Oval Office meeting between Trump and Bukele, neither leader committed to returning the man.
"Well, I'm supposed to have suggested that I smuggle a terrorist into the United States, right?" Buekele retorted when pressed on returning the man to the U.S. "Return him to the United States. I smuggle him into the United States. I'm not going to do it."
"How can I smuggle a terror[ist] to the United States? I don't have the power to return him to the United States," Buekele said. Trump also asked White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller to weigh in.
"So it's very arrogant, even for American media to suggest that we would even tell El Salvador how to handle their own citizens. As a starting point, as two immigration courts found that he was a member of MS-13," Miller said. "When President Trump declared MS-13 to be a foreign terrorist organization, that meant that he was no longer eligible under federal law... for any form of immigration relief in the United States."
"So he had a deportation order that was valid, which meant that, under our law, he's not even allowed to be present in the United States and had to be returned because of the foreign terrorist designation," he added. "This issue was then by a district court judge completely inverted, and a district court judge tried to tell the administration that they had to kidnap a citizen of El Salvador and flying back here. That issue was raised to the Supreme Court, and the Supreme Court said the district court order was unlawful and its main components were reversed."