DHS Declares Abrego ‘Will Never Walk America’s Streets’ Hours After Judges Order His Release
from the the-us-government-is-out-of-control dept
Here’s how you know the Kilmar Abrego Garcia case represents something fundamentally broken in government accountability: within hours of two federal judges ordering his release and explicitly warning the government not to play games with him, DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin went on X to repeat laughably false claims about Abrego while declaring that he “will never walk America’s streets again” and calling one of the judges “lawless” and “unhinged.”
That’s a Department of Homeland Security official publicly announcing the government’s intent to defy court orders while repeating laughable claims that judges have already called “bordering on fanciful.”
It would be almost comically stupid if it weren’t so dangerous—and if it weren’t the inevitable result of months of the US government accidentally trafficking a man to El Salvador’s torture camps, then fabricating evidence to cover their tracks when they got caught.
The backstory matters because it shows this isn’t just bureaucratic incompetence—it’s a pattern of lawlessness that continues even when judges explicitly call it out.
As a reminder: despite having an order from an immigration court that Abrego cannot be deported back to El Salvador, the government sent him there anyway. First they said it was an “accident,” then claimed it was intentional after firing the lawyer who admitted the mistake. They refused to facilitate his return even after the Supreme Court told them to do so, claiming it was up to El Salvador (which was demonstrably false).
Of course, once they had cooked up a completely bogus indictment, based off of letting actual traffickers go free in exchange for claims about Abrego, suddenly it turned out that they were able to bring him back to the US… to face these laughable charges.
Multiple judges have called out the frivolous nature of the charges, and the US government said “well if you free him, we’ll just traffic him to some random third country that isn’t El Salvador.”
Which brings us to this week’s judicial smackdown—and the government’s immediate decision to make its intentions to ignore it clear.
On Wednesday, Judge Waverly Crenshaw ordered that Abrego be released from detention. There’s a lot to the ruling, but in short, the court is not persuaded that Abrego is a flight risk:
The insufficiency of this evidence is underscored by what is not in the record that normally warrants a finding that a defendant is at risk for nonappearance. The Government has presented no evidence that Abrego has failed to appear for court proceedings in the past, that he failed to abide by the protective orders Ms. Vasquez took out against him, or that he has otherwise ever shown a pattern of disrespect for the law. Nor has the Government presented evidence that Abrego has the financial means to finance flight, even if he wanted to. To the contrary, the Court has evidence before it that suggests that if the Court released Abrego on conditions, he would comply. As the Pretrial Services Report demonstrates, Abrego has reported to an ICE officer on four separate occasions from October 23, 2020 to January 2, 2024. Further, as the THP body camera footage from November 30, 2022 demonstrates, when Abrego was pulled over that night, although not fully truthful, he did not flee or attempt to flee, was cooperative, answered the officer’s questions, and provided the officer with the information requested to the extent he was able to do so. This cuts against the notion that Abrego disrespects the law so much that he would voluntarily avoid future court proceedings or court orders if released.
Perhaps more importantly, the judge sees no reason to believe that Abrego is “a danger to the community.”
As the Court discussed above, the Government’s general statements about the crimes brought against Abrego, and the evidence it has in support of those crimes, do not prove Abrego’s dangerousness. See supra, Section III.B.2.a. Although the Government has presented evidence by a preponderance that Abrego transported minors, there is no solid evidence in the record indicating any of them, or others transported, were physically or emotionally harmed by Abrego. And Abrego is correct that these crimes are not those that are considered typically violent such that a presumption of detention is warranted. See supra, Section III.B.2.a. While the Court does give some weight to Agent Joseph’s testimony that CW-1 and CW-1 stated Abrego was involved with guns and drugs while participating in the human smuggling conspiracy, the Court notes that this testimony was based on witness statements that evolved throughout the interview process, and so it alone cannot show that Abrego is a danger to the community such that he cannot be released.
Those “evolving” witness statements are detailed by the court and make the claims by the informant—again who asked for and received protections from the US government for making these claims against Abrego—look pretty sketchy.
Indeed, the court calls out the DOJ’s “poor attempts” to claim that Abrego is a high-ranking member of MS-13. Or even connected to MS-13 at all, saying that the DOJ’s argument “border[ed] on fanciful.”
Nor does the Government’s poor attempts to tie Abrego to MS-13 get it there. Of the three witnesses Agent Joseph testified about that discussed Abrego’s purported affiliation with MS-13, the closest any of them come to stating that Abrego is a member of MS-13 is two witnesses stating he was “familial” with gang members and a third witness stating she “believed” him to be a member. Entirely absent from the record, however, are any indications that such “belief” is rooted in fact or that such “familial” nature came from his actual membership in or support of MS-13 rather than the simple fact that he, like many members of MS-13, is El Salvadorian. For instance, there is no evidence before the Court that Abrego: has markings or tattoos showing gang affiliation; has working relationships with known MS-13 members; ever told any of the witnesses that he is a MS-13 member; or has ever been affiliated with any sort of gang activity.12 To the contrary, Agent Joseph presented testimony based on statements from cooperating witnesses that Abrego transported both Barrio 18 and MS-13 members alike, and was cordial with both during those trips. This cuts against the already slim evidence demonstrating Abrego is a member of MS-13. Based on the record before it, for the Court to find that Abrego is member of or in affiliation with MS13, it would have to make so many inferences from the Government’s proffered evidence in its favor that such conclusion would border on fanciful.
The magistrate judge on that same case (the one who initially argued Abrego should be freed) has put a 30-day stay on the ruling to allow the government to appeal (meaning that Abrego Garcia will spend today, which apparently is his 30th birthday, still detained).
Around the same time, over in Maryland, Judge Paula Xinis, who is handling the original Abrego case (the “facilitate his return” case), issued an order saying that Abrego needs to be returned to Maryland, but more importantly put a ton of restrictions on the federal government not to fuck with Abrego:
By Order of this Court, Defendants (1) are prohibited from taking Abrego Garcia into immediate ICE custody in Tennessee; (2) must restore him to his ICE Order of Supervision in Baltimore; and (3) if they initiate third-country removal proceedings, must provide seventy-two (72) business hours’ notice to Abrego Garcia and his counsel of the intended third country, as more fully detailed below.
Judge Xinis reminds everyone how badly the DOJ fucked around on this case and notes in passing that sanctions are still on the line.
For three months after this Court issued the injunction, Defendants disclaimed any authority to facilitate his return and disregarded court orders. Defendants’ defiance and foot-dragging are, to be sure, the subject of a separate sanctions motion. ECF No. 195. The Court will not recount this troubling history in detail, other than to note Defendants’ persistent lack of transparency with the tribunal adds to why further injunctive relief is warranted.
Eventually, on June 6, 2025, Defendants returned Abrego Garcia much the same way they had removed him—in secret and with no advance notice. Nonetheless, he is back, and the first part of this Court’s injunctive relief has been met. But Defendants have demonstrated no appetite for fulfilling the second part: to restore Abrego Garcia to the status quo ante.
In a footnote, Judge Xinis separately notes that to this day, the government hasn’t even explained how Abrego got back and no one in the government—at any point—informed his family or lawyers, who all found out about it on the news.
The judge isn’t saying that the government can’t start immigration proceedings against him, but that it must actually allow for the kind of due process he’s been denied this year:
That said, once Abrego Garcia is restored to ICE supervision in this District, he may be ordered to appear at the Baltimore Field Office for commencement of immigration proceedings, and these proceedings may or may not include lawful arrest, detention and eventual removal. So long as such actions are taken within the bounds of the Constitution and applicable statutes, this Court will have nothing further to say.
But Judge Xinis wasn’t born yesterday. She knows how much the DOJ has been lying to her.
Defendants have done little to assure the Court that absent intervention, Abrego Garcia’s due process rights will be protected.
And this is where McLaughlin’s immediate violation becomes so telling. Rather than acknowledge the judicial findings or express any intent to comply with court orders, DHS doubled down on the same fabricated narrative that judges have systematically dismantled.
McLaughlin’s tweets weren’t just inappropriate—they were a confession. Hours after one judge ordered Abrego’s release and another explicitly prohibited DHS from taking him into ICE custody, McLaughlin declared he “will never walk America’s streets again”—publicly announcing the government’s intent to violate both orders.
Separately, Abrego’s lawyers filed a motion with Judge Crenshaw arguing that McLaughlin’s statements violate local court rules designed to protect defendants’ right to a fair trial. The filing makes clear this isn’t just about inappropriate tweeting:
These are exactly the kinds of statements that Local Criminal Rule 2.01 recognizes are likely to prejudice Mr. Abrego’s right to a fair trial, as Mr. Abrego has already argued about similar statements the government has made. (See Dkt 69 at 11-13; Dkt 94 at 2). The government has persisted in its efforts to use press statements outside of court to persuade the public of its allegation that Mr. Abrego is a member of MS-13—an allegation the Court described, just yesterday, as “border[ing] on the fanciful.” (Dkt. 95 at 32). These repeated public statements are likely to taint the jury pool. They are likely to endanger Mr. Abrego and his family. And they violate this Court’s Local Criminal Rules and Mr. Abrego’s due process rights.
Indeed, McLaughlin’s unhinged tweets seem only likely to help Abrego, as it makes it clear that since the government can’t stop lying about him, there’s no way he can get a fair trial.
But the real story here isn’t legal strategy—it’s the gleeful lawlessness on display. This isn’t bureaucratic incompetence or even garden-variety cover-ups. This is a government so committed to never admitting error that they will fabricate evidence, defy court orders, and publicly attack federal judges rather than acknowledge they accidentally trafficked an innocent man to a torture camp.
The cruelty isn’t a bug, it’s a feature. McLaughlin’s tweets weren’t a communications mistake—they were a deliberate middle finger to two federal courts and a public declaration that this administration considers itself above judicial oversight. They’d rather destroy one man’s life than admit their “mass deportation” strategy is a lawless mess that sends innocent people to be tortured.
That’s not just evil. It’s really fucking stupid evil, performed for an audience that cheers when government officials brag about ignoring judges. And that should terrify anyone who thinks courts might someday protect them from an out-of-control executive branch.
Filed Under: abrego garcia, dhs, doj, maryland, ms-13, paula xinis, tennessee, tricia mclaughlin, waverly crenshaw


Comments on “DHS Declares Abrego ‘Will Never Walk America’s Streets’ Hours After Judges Order His Release”
So when the people involved in not obeying court orders will start being jailed for it? Because I’m seeing no consequences so far.
Re: Habeas Corpus
At this point he’s been ordered released, the only real power the judge has now is Habeas Corpus. The judge can then free the man in the court room.
Should Habeas Corpus be ignored (or they arrest him as he leaves the court) its right back to the supreme court and they already got several smackdowns in this case over judge power. Habeas Corpus is one of the most basic judge powers so its not like the supreme court is going to rule it does not exist.
Re:
Only once people willing to do so are in power. Which, at the rate the U.S. is going, is going to have the same prerequisites as Nazi Germany did.
Abrego came from “He’ll never quit CECOT, ever” to “He’ll never walk America’s streets”. By the end of the year, “He’ll never make snowmen wearing a blue jacket between 9am and 11am”.
Safe to assume that the worse is behind Abrego. No bad for a supposed drug baron and immigration terrorist.
Re:
Or perhaps by the end of the year, Abrego will have been given citizenship and a free car as part of a court settlement, thus joining the ranks of the many other citizens who also never walk America’s streets (but sometimes walk farther than they’d like, across the Costco parking lot).
It would be stupid if admitting to the crime would result in consequences. Since it won’t, there’s nothing stupid about it.
If anything, it is smart evil. The more openly and publicly you declare that you can do whatever you want to whomever you want, the less opposition you will face as people do not wish for “whomever” to be them.
DHS declares they are a gang of anti American criminals who will not obey the constitution or the law.
Unfortunately, it’s likely this administration can ignore the courts and get away with it, with help from the Supreme Court. Yesterday, the Court abandoned the Constitution and gave Trump the power to fire the leaders of an agency that Congress specifically protected. The Constitution defines three branches of government to create a system of “checks and balances.” We now have two branches…
Re: Two branches?
Branch One: The Orange Bully
Branch Two: the dumb fzckers who enable him?
this sort of thing...
This sort of thing, the Trump administration’s evident zeal and joy in ignoring, subverting, or evading court orders – ‘thumbing their noses’ at the rule of law, will continue until these judges start enforcing their court orders by finding officials in contempt, and placing them in jail until there is full compliance with the court’s orders. Any one of us ordinary citizens would quickly find ourselves fined or in jail if we ignore a court order — why do Trump’s minions get away with this disrespect and lawbreaking?
Re:
The reason Trump and his cronies get away with it is because Xinis and the other judges who want some semblance of justice are cowards. There needs to be jail for these people defying the release of Abrego and more.
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Taking Sides
This case is an excellent reminder of why Democrats are experiencing record low approval numbers in polling right now. Seldom have we seen them fight so hard for law abiding Americans as they have fought for a foreign national wife beater.
Re:
I see you here all the time, Koby.
I kinda want to know if you actually support the shredding of every constitutional principle Americans have bled and died for over the past 250 years, noth at home and abroad, and the full (deep)throated support for a lying litigious idiotic grifter pedophile rapist you espouse.
Or do you just get off on being the literal personification of why the internet sucks?
I
Re:
Typical stupid Koby, missing the point just like everyone in the MAGA cult.
You think this is about “fighting” for a legal immigrant but it isn’t, it’s about adherence to the law and the constitution which is something you don’t give a shit about because if you did it would destroy your little echo chamber of stupidity.
Re: You know the saying...
First they came for the Communists, and I did not speak out—because I was not a Communist.
Then they came for the Socialists, and I did not speak out—because I was not a Socialist.
Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out—because I was not a trade unionist.
Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out—because I was not a Jew.
Then they came for MAGATS and nobody cared.
Re:
STFU Koby
Re:
Meanwhile Republicans take spousal abusers, rapists and pedophiles and make them president, then build their entire identity around their demagogue and spend every single waking moment defending the latest morally indefensible thing that has happened at their behest.
Re:
Alleged*
Sounds like we need to put you away for dismembering your children though.
Re:
Hey Koby, I don’t think it’s wise to go throwing around blatantly laughable claims about “approval numbers” when your cult leader is polling at all time lows.
https://news.gallup.com/poll/692879/independents-drive-trump-approval-second-term-low.aspx
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Re: Re:
You’re comparing a Trump 6 month low for this term, against a Democrat 16 year low. But there’s a problem with that: Quinnipac polling didn’t track registered voter approval ratings prior to 2009.
Re: Re: Re:
Your own statement is internally inconsistent.
Do you even proofread your garbage?
Re: Re: Re:
You have an astounding ability to misunderstand reality. You are either a willful liar, incredibly stupid, fucking brainwashed, or some combination of all of those.
The disapproval of Democrats is not because they’re happy with Trump — as seen by Trump’s dismal approval ratings — but rather with the Democrats inability to actually stop his destruction of the American constitutional order. And that includes stopping the injustice done to Abrego.
Like, literally, when people learn the details about Abrego they immediately shift their opinion negatively about Trump.
https://www.gelliottmorris.com/p/new-poll-americans-oppose-trumps?open=false#%C2%A7survey-experiment-highlighting-the-kilmar-abrego-garcia-case-reduces-support-for-deportations
I know, you have a cultist’s need to praise Trump and bash those opposing him at every turn. It’s transparent and pathetic, but reality says you’re on the fucking side of the fascists, and the American people despise you and everything you stand for.
Re: Re: Re:
“Compare this short amount of time to get to a low approval rating to this amount of time that’s 32 times longer to get to the same result” is not the win you clearly think it is, MAGAt.
Re: A quotation you may be well served to consider
William Roper: “So, now you give the Devil the benefit of law!”
Sir Thomas More: “Yes! What would you do? Cut a great road through the law to get after the Devil?”
Roper: “Yes, I’d cut down every law in England to do that!”
More: “Oh? And when the last law was down, and the Devil turned ’round on you, where would you hide, Roper, the laws all being flat? This country is planted thick with laws, from coast to coast, Man’s laws, not God’s! And if you cut them down, and you’re just the man to do it, do you really think you could stand upright in the winds that would blow then? Yes, I’d give the Devil benefit of law, for my own safety’s sake!”
-Robert Bolt, ‘A Man For All Seasons’
Re: Re:
Sadly these slippery slope warning quotes being prophetic about not pushing back against the law as a whole to stay just short of killing conservative ideologies outright have no bearing on how the real world works anymore.
At some point ‘How do you kill an ideology?’ will be discovered and it will be aimed right at the heart of the conservative voting coalitions in most nations the world over.
Re: Re: Re:
Reading comprehension isn’t your strongest suit, is it?
I was directing that quote at Koby.
Re: Re: Re:2
Perhaps that was Koby/Ehud Gavron sockpuppeting as an AC, as he has so many times before.
Re:
This is one of those revelatory statements that say so much about the conservative mindset. Like many other things, they consider justice to be a zero sum game, where if one person gets justice, another person must suffer. If we fight for undocumented immigrants, then we must be shorting citizens. But what you don’t understand about rights and justice and freedom is that it’s like fire. The more you have of it, the easier it is to spread further and wider and then you get even more. You can’t suppress the rights of immigrants (constitutional or human or civil or other) without damaging the rights of everyone else, including citizens.
And don’t pretend that Trump is only going after undocumented immigrants. Anyone fighting anything Trump is doing is helping defend the rights of everyone who cares about justice. You just care about yourself.
Re:
This case is an excellent reminder of why Democrats are experiencing record low approval numbers in polling right now.
And that’s the problem with assholes like you – Garcia’s guilt or innocence isn’t the question. Isn’t that of fundamental importance?
I mean, it’s no issue for you that some masked pieces of shit are black bagging people for dubious reasons, and having them ‘figure it out’ from an El Salvadorian shithole? Lying to the court? Stonewalling the court? Whining like a 5-year-old about the judge being a ‘fake-news doodie-head crazy-pants’?
You’re exactly what makes this country the ridiculous shit-stain on the rest of the world that it is. Because you people are convinced that electing the biggest piles of human excrement is a solid plan forward.
…and is all this what Jesus would do, Koby?
Why is this tolerated?
This is simple: “Release him within 24 hours or report to jail for contempt. If neither happens, you will be the one being extradited.”
And throw a gag order on them.
The lack of sanctions in the face of sanctionable behavior says otherwise.
Threats only matter if you’re willing to back them up, and we’re long past that point. Especially given in cases where it has been initiated, we’re still seeing bullshittery around “administrative stays”
Re:
Yup, a bluff only works if the recipient has good reason to believe you can and will follow through. If they don’t all you’re doing to making yourself look like a fool to everyone watching.
'I'm warning you, violate my rulings one more time and it's the finger wag!'
But Defendants have demonstrated no appetite for fulfilling the second part: to restore Abrego Garcia to the status quo ante.
Well, yeah, why would they? They’ve been smacking you and the legal system around this entire time and the most you’ve done is pout at them even as you bent over backwards to treat them as acting in good faith, is it any wonder they feel confident publicly mocking you and any legal orders you or any other judge issues?
Were I in the DOJ’s shoes I’d feel supremely confident in openly mocking the legal system too and making clear that I don’t give a damn what the judges order since I don’t consider the law or legal decisions even remotely binding on me. I mean based upon their history since the regime took over what are they going to do, issue stern warnings and bluffs of sanctions?
Judges need to grow a spine and stop ‘threatening’ sanctions or contempt of court and actually issue sanctions and/or contempt of court charges. Either bring down the hammer or drop the farce and just admit you’re only a tool to rule how the regime wants you to.
Re: Cojones
Not a spine at this point. At this point they need to grow some cojones.
Regime in action; the only thing that matters is the naked exercise of power. Truth doesn’t matter, policy doesn’t matter, what you said or did yesterday does not matter. All that matters is what the whim of the despot is today.
It’s very clear what we must do, this being a Christian country. It’s right there in the Book of Matthew, verse 7:12. When Trump is dond being President in 2028, he needs to be sent to CECOT. It’s right there in the Book- “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.”
Why he wants to go there is beyond me, but that’s what the Book says we must do. So be it, or as the Book phrases it- Amen.
His defense lawyers have requested he stays in prison for 30 more days while they try to arrange him being safe enough, from the government’s stated plan to instantly deport him without due process, to be released
The USA has reached the stage where a random immigrant’s own defense lawyers are trying to keep him in prison to protect him from openly stated and preplanned governmental malfeasance
The corruption of the law by the DoJ knows no bounds and no shame