A deeply troubling deportation error by the Trump administration sent a Salvadoran man—who had legal protection from deportation—into a notorious Salvadoran prison. His harrowing experience is drawing attention to serious human rights concerns.
A Devastating Mistake
Kilmar Armando Ábrego García, a Salvadoran national, was mistakenly deported to El Salvador in March 2025 despite having withholding of removal protection, a legal safeguard from deportation granted in 2019 after he fled gang violence. The administration later called the deportation an “administrative error,” yet he was placed in CECOT, El Salvador’s maximum-security Terrorism Confinement Center. He was accused of MS-13 gang affiliation—claims he and legal records vehemently deny—without any criminal charges in either country.
Legal Battle to Return
A federal appeals court ordered the Trump administration to facilitate his return. The ruling emphasized that his removal violated court orders and his rights under existing humanitarian protections.
Broader Implications: Deportations to El Salvador
Ábrego García’s case is not isolated. Dozens of individuals—including Venezuelan asylum seekers—were deported to El Salvador without due process, often to serve indefinite terms in a prison notorious for human rights abuses.
Voices of the Victims
Another deportee, a Venezuelan makeup artist and LGBTQ advocate, was incarcerated at CECOT under false suspicions of gang affiliation—based solely on cultural tattoos. He endured homophobic abuse and over 125 days in detention before returning home via prisoner exchange.
What This Means
This case—and others like it—highlight the dangers of mass deportation practices that bypass judicial oversight and due process. Mistakes like these devastate lives and erode public trust in immigration enforcement.