But as he experiences some of the few days he’s had with his family since being sent erroneously to an El Salvador prison in March, his lawyer said he’s still hoping for a just resolution to his case.
“He’s been through a lot, and he’s still fighting,” said his lawyer Simon Sandoval-Moshenberg during an interview with AP following Abrego Garcia’s court-ordered release from detention last week. “What it is he can fight for is circumscribed by the law and by the great power of the United States government, but he’s still fighting.”
Abrego Garcia’s mistaken deportation to El Salvador helped galvanize opposition to President Donald Trump’s immigration policies. He was held in a notoriously brutal prison there despite having no criminal record.
U.S. officials claimed Abrego Garcia was an MS-13 gang member, an allegation he denies and which he wasn’t charged for. He was later charged with human smuggling, accusations his lawyers have called preposterous and vindictive.
Then last week, a federal district court judge in Maryland ordered him to be released and barred the government for now from detaining him again until a hearing can be held in his case, possibly as early as this week, said Sandoval-Moshenberg.
Asylum, green card or Costa Rica
And after the alleged abuse Sandoval-Moshenberg said Abrego Garcia suffered in El Salvador this year, he thought he would have a “rock solid” asylum case. But, citing the twists and turns of his case and how he’s become a symbol for the administration’s pursuit of immigrants, he’s concerned about his chances of getting a fair trial in immigration court.
“I think they’ve already shown that they’re willing to stack the deck,” said Sandoval-Moshenberg.
Abrego Garcia could also apply for a green card since he’s married to an American citizen. But that would require getting a waiver from the government, said Sandoval-Moshenberg, and the lawyer is doubtful one would be granted.
Or he could continue to seek removal to Costa Rica, said Sandoval-Moshenberg, a country that has offered to allow him to enter as a refugee and live and work legally. And he wouldn’t be returned to El Salvador, the attorney said.
But he also believes the government would continue to fight that option.
“They’re focused on beating him. They’re focused on punishing him. They’re focusing on making him miserable. I guess Costa Rica isn’t miserable enough,” he said.
Figuring out what the government will do
“There’s so many different ways it could go. And so much of it depends on just how dirty the government’s willing to play,” he said.
Sandoval-Moshenberg said that he thought that if the government was willing to remove him to Costa Rica, his client would accept it although he stressed that the decision was up to him.
He said that Abrego Garcia and his legal team wouldn’t consider that justice — that to him would mean staying with his family in the U.S. But Sandoval-Moshenberg said that given everything he’s faced and the “fact that they’re apparently willing to use infinite prosecutorial resources against him, deportation to Costa Rica is an acceptable outcome for him.”
Sandoval-Moshenberg also stressed that there is one place that Abrego Garcia does not want to go.
“His number one priority is not to end up back in CECOT,” said Sandoval-Moshenberg, referring to the prison in El Salvador where his client was held. Sandoval-Moshenberg said Abrego Garcia had been tortured there, claims authorities in El Salvador have denied and that the AP could not independently verify.
“His number one priority is avoiding getting sent back to that prison.”
‘He’s a random guy’
“This isn’t a case where he’s an activist, like an immigrants rights activist, or he’s been, you know, persecuted by the government for his pro-Palestinian speech or something like that,” the attorney said. “He’s a random guy.”
The whole process of deportation, imprisonment and return has “just been this really sort of bizarre, out of world experience for him,” Sandoval-Moshenberg said.
The judge temporarily barred the Trump administration from detaining Abrego Garcia last Friday until the next court hearing.
While no date has been set for that, it could happen as early as later this week, Sandoval-Moshenberg said, noting the whiplash of the case has been a struggle for Abrego Garcia and his family.
“The ground underneath his feet, it’s just earthquake after earthquake,” he said.
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Loller reported from Nashville, Tennessee.
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