According to a notice sent by a senior department of the Trump Administration Homeland Security Officer and government officials received by CBS News, Kilmar can try to send Abrego Garcia to Uganda.
A few hours after Abrego Garcia – which was accidentally deported to Al Salvador earlier this year – Pre-trial released from detention On Friday, his lawyers were sent a court-requirement notice of his possible exile in Uganda, said to his lawyers.
The notice states that they can be sent to the East African country “not before 72 hours from now, not including weekends.
In the first week, CBS News Was to report earlier The Uganda agreed to an American request, who is not his citizens, who are not his citizens, became the latest “third country” to attack the exile agreement with another Trump administration.
Abrego Garcia, a native of El Salvador, was held in a notorious Salvadoran jail for months, before he returned to the US and went to jail waiting to prosecute federal human trafficking charges. A judge ruled that he should be released from detention before a test set for January.
Trump administration has indicated for months If he gets out of jail, immigration and customs enforcement can take him into custody and demand removal of him from the US again.
In 2019, an immigration judge ruled that Abrego Garcia could not be deported to Al Salvador as he feared harassment by local gangs in the Central American country. The Trump administration said he was deported there anyway due to “administrative error”.
Still, government Can find legally Another “third country” of Abrego Garcia for Uganda or Al Salvador – one exercise Trump administration has rapidly used for unwarded migrants in recent months.
Abrego Garcia is planning to return to Maryland, where he lived with his family before his march exile. Maryland -based US District Judge Paula Shinis ruled last month that the government would have to give them a 72 -hour notice if she is planning to start exile. But he did not stop the government from demanding his removal, writing that the immigration agent “can take whatever action is available for them under the law.”
CBS News has reached DHS and Abrego Garcia’s lawyers for comments.