US says it will send Kilmar Abrego Garcia to Uganda after he refused plea deal

Immigration officials said they intended to expel Kilmar Abrego Garcia in Uganda, after refusing an offer to send to Costa Rica in exchange for staying in prison and pleading guilty to accusations of human smuggling, according to a judicial file on Saturday.
Costa Rica’s offer arrived late Thursday after it was clear that the national Salvadoran would probably be released from a Tennessee prison the next day. Abrego Garcia refused to extend his stay in prison and was released on Friday to wait for the trial in Maryland with his family. Later in the day, the Ministry of Internal Security informed its lawyers that it would be deported to Uganda and should present itself to the immigration authorities on Monday.
His lawyers refused to comment whether the plea offer had been officially canceled. The memoir they only said said that Greo Garcia refused part of the offer – to stay in prison – and that his lawyers “would communicate the government’s proposal to Mr. Abrego”.
The letter from the Costarian government said that Greo Garcia would be welcomed in this country as a legal immigrant and would not be confronted with the possibility of detention. An additional advantage of the offer would be that Costa Rica is a Spanish -speaking country, like the native of El Salvador by Abrego Garcia. According to the memory,
The case of Abrego Garcia has become a flash point in the immigration program of President Donald Trump after being wrongly expelled in Salvador in March, despite the previous determination of a judge that he faced a “well-founded fear” of violence there. Faced with a court order, the Trump administration brought him back to the United States in June, only to hold him accusations of human smuggling.
He pleaded not guilty and asked the judge to reject the case, saying that it was an attempt to punish him for challenging his expulsion in Salvador. The file on Saturday was a supplement of this request in rejection, declaring that the threat of deporting it to Uganda is more proof that the accusation is vindictive.
“Although he asked for and received insurance from the government of Costa Rica that Mr. Abrego was accepted there, a few minutes of his release from police custody, an ice representative informed Mr. Abrego’s council that the government intended to expel Mr. Abrego to Uganda and ordered him to report to Baltimore Baltimore on Monday morning,” said the brief, The application of Baltimore customs.
The smuggling charges arise from a stop of traffic in 2022 in Tennessee for speeding. There were nine passengers in the car, and the officers discussed their suspicions of smuggling among themselves. However, Abrego Garcia was authorized to continue driving with only a warning.
An agent of the Ministry of Internal Security then declared that he had started to investigate traffic stop until April, when the government was facing increasing pressure to return Abrego Garcia to the United States
Although Greo Garcia was tried eligible for provisional release last month, he stayed in prison at the request of his lawyers, who feared that the republican administration could try to deport him immediately if he was released. A recent decision in a separate case in Maryland required that the ice warned 72 hours before organizing an expulsion procedure – the time to allow an expelled extent to set up a defense. Friday, an ice email sent to lawyers at 4:01 pm refers to this decision.
“Please let this email serve as a note that the DHS can delete your client, Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia, in Uganda at the start of 72 hours (absent weekends),” he said. Uganda recently agreed to take deportees from the United States, provided they do not have legal records and are not unaccompanied minors.
Federal officials argued that Greo Garcia can be expelled because he came to the United States illegally and because an American immigration judge considered him eligible for expulsion in 2019, simply not towards his native Salvador.



