Attorney General Pam Bondi said on Wednesday that deported Salvadoran national Kilmar Abrego Garcia will not be returning to the United States.
“He is not coming back to our country. President Bukele said he was not sending him back. That’s the end of the story,” Bondi told reporters at an April 16 press conference in Washington, referring to remarks made earlier this week by El Salvador’s president, Nayib Bukele, who rejected the idea of returning him.
“If he wanted to send him back, we would give him a plane ride back,” Bondi said. “There was no situation ever where he was going to stay in this country. None, none.”
Abrego Garcia, a 29-year-old illegal immigrant and alleged MS-13 gang member from El Salvador, was arrested on March 12 and three days later was placed on a deportation flight to El Salvador.
Before his deportation, Abrego Garcia had been living in Maryland with his U.S. citizen wife and children. In 2019, an immigration judge granted him “withholding of removal” status after finding he faced credible threats from the rival Barrio 18 gang if deported.
An attorney for the Justice Department had said that Garcia’s removal was an “administrative error.” However, White House adviser Stephen Miller said on Monday on Fox News: “He was not mistakenly sent to El Salvador. This was the right person sent to the right place.”
The attorney has since been placed on indefinite paid leave for his comments.
At Wednesday’s press conference, Bondi said that “one additional step in paperwork” had been missed but that the deportation was ultimately justified.
“He’s from El Salvador. He’s in El Salvador. And that’s where the president plans on keeping him,” she said.
Bondi said Garcia is a member of MS-13, a transnational criminal organization recently designated by the U.S. government as a foreign terrorist group.
“He would have come back, had one extra step of paperwork and gone back again,” Bondi said of what would happen if Garcia were to be returned to the United States.
Rejecting the government’s narrow reading of its obligations, Xinis emphasized that “facilitate” means “aiding, assisting, or making easier” Garcia’s release and ensuring his case is handled as it would have been “had he not been improperly sent to El Salvador.”