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Alleged MS-13 gangbanger Kilmar Abrego Garcia told ICE he wasn’t afraid to go back to El Salvador

Kilmar Abrego Garcia, an MS-13 member deported to El Salvador’s infamous Cecot Megaprison last month, told an ICE representative who is not afraid to return to Central America before he loads onto a one-way flight to his country, sources told the Post.

Garcia’s entry in Abrego undermines the statement he gave to the federal government in 2019, expressing his fear of actually returning to El Salvador due to the threat of gang violence.

Abrego Garcia was deported last month for administrative errors towards El Salvador. Via Reuters
A man believed to be Abrego Garcia is seen on CECOT. AP

That March, Ice had a local police officer interacted with a confirmed MS-13 soldier in a parking lot at Home Depot in Maryland, detaining Abrego Garcia after he was found illegally in the United States. Documents released by the Department of Justice on Wednesday.

“A reliable source of information with proven track record” told detectives at the Hyattville Police Department that Abrego Garcia is a member of the Western faction of the MS-13, who carried the “Cecuo” rank and the “Chell” of the Moniker, according to an interview sheet with Gangfield.

Officers also said that Abrego Garcia wore a Chicago bull hat and hoodie, covering the rolls of money that surround the president’s eyes, ears and mouth in various denominations that “indicate Hispanic gang culture.”

“Wearing Chicago Bulls hats indicates that they are members of the MS-13 in good condition,” the police report read.

However, the immigration judge blocked the federal government’s ability to expel Abrego Garcia to El Salvador in October 2019, accepting Salvadran’s claims at risk of retaliation from gangs like the MS-13’s main rival, Barrio 18.

Trump met with President Salvador this week and refused to return Abrego Garcia to the United States. AP

Abrego Garcia was shipped on March 15th, along with 260 other famous gang members, based on the alien enemy law of the 18th century.

Abrego Garcia’s lawyers argue that their clients have no US criminal history justifying his removal, and say the government will forfeit its right to stay in the US at the 2011 illegal crossing of the US-Mexico border.

Several federal courts, including the US Supreme Court, have requested that the Trump administration “take all available steps to promote” Abrego Garcia’s return to America.

Justice Department lawyers claim that by eliminating all domestic obstacles for Abrego Garcia to be returned, they meet the terms of the order, but they cannot force El Salvador to release one of its citizens.

It was also revealed on Wednesday that Abrego Garcia was. Previously, he was accused of physically abusing his wife. Jennifer Vasquez Sula, a US citizen who has publicly advocated for his release.

Vazquez Sula applied for a protective order against her husband in 2021, and according to court documents he punched, scratched, grabbed her and said she was hurt.

The woman said Wednesday that she had survived domestic abuse “in a previous relationship” and “acted cautiously after her disagreement with Kilmer.”

“Things didn’t escalate so I decided not to track the civil court process. I was able to personally cooperate with this situation as a family, including going to counseling,” she said.

“Our marriage has become stronger over the next few years. No one is perfect, and marriage is not perfect.”

Vazquez Sula argued that alleged abuse of her husband was “not justifying the action of acquiring him and deporting him to a country where he was supposed to be protected from deportation.”

“I will continue to stand by him and continue to demand justice from him.”

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