Left: Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a Salvadoran citizen who was living in Maryland and deported to El Salvador by the Trump administration, speaks in a hotel restaurant in San Salvador, El Salvador, Thursday, April 17, 2025 (Press Office Sen. Van Hollen, via AP). Right: President Donald Trump arrives for a formal dinner at the Paleis Huis ten Bosch ahead of the NATO summit in The Hague, Netherlands, Tuesday, June 24, 2025 (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber).
Lawyers for Kilmar Abrego Garcia have filed a motion to dismiss his criminal case in Tennessee, arguing the indictment against him “was filed as revenge.”
The Maryland man’s legal counsel acknowledged in the motion that efforts to dismiss indictments on the basis of “vindictive and selective prosecution” are rarely successful, “[b]ut if there has ever been a case for dismissal on those grounds, this is that case.”
Abrego Garcia’s battle with the Trump administration has become the symbol of the president’s controversial deportation efforts. He was deported to El Salvador in March – despite a 2019 court order barring his relocation to his birth country – and he sued the administration to secure his return.
President Donald Trump and some of his Cabinet leaders stonewalled efforts to see him returned in a saga that brought diplomatic relations, political posturing, and the questioning of judicial legitimacy to the forefront of public consciousness. But then — suddenly — Abrego Garcia was returned, just to be handed migrant smuggling charges in a separate case that his lawyers have called a “farce.”
In their Tuesday filing, Abrego Garcia’s lawyers suggest the Tennessee case would not exist without his Maryland one, in which he has challenged his “unlawful removal.”
“The government is attempting to use this case — and this Court — to punish Mr. Abrego for successfully fighting his unlawful removal,” they wrote to U.S. District Judge Waverly D. Crenshaw Jr., a Barack Obama appointee. “That is a constitutional violation of the most basic sort. The Indictment must be dismissed.”
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They further allege that the government has undertaken an “unprecedented retribution campaign” against Abrego Garcia — with the administration seeking, especially given the high-profile nature of his immigration case, to paint him as a criminal.
“While the government waged this public campaign to discredit and punish Mr. Abrego, it also sought to use its criminal investigative authority for the same purpose,” the lawyers wrote. “In late April 2025, the government opened a new criminal investigation into Mr. Abrego, the better to support its arguments against him in the court of public opinion.”
Abrego Garcia’s lawyers say the “centerpiece of the government’s fledgling investigation” into allegedly smuggling undocumented migrants is a November 2022 traffic stop for which he was neither charged nor cited. “The government has gone to extreme lengths to make a criminal case against Mr. Abrego,” the lawyers add, pointing to alleged co-conspirators they contend are unreliable. Abrego Garcia arrived in Tennessee on June 6, and Trump administration officials’ public actions that day, his lawyers argue, underscore what the case is all about.
From the memorandum, at length:
The government’s statements that day make plain that this case was initiated to punish Mr. Abrego for challenging his removal and to support high-ranking government officials’ false claims that deporting him to El Salvador had been the right thing to do. Attorney General [Pam] Bondi, who called a press conference to announce the charges, gloated that “[t]his is what American justice looks like,” and unethically opined that Mr. Abrego would be found guilty, sentenced, and then “returned to his home country of El Salvador.” Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche went on television to say that the government began “investigating” Mr. Abrego only after “a judge in Maryland…questioned” the government’s decision to deport him, found that it “had no right to deport him,” and “accus[ed] us of doing something wrong.” He added: “[T]he reason [Mr. Abrego] was returned and the facilitation that brought him back here is not a Judge; it’s an arrest warrant issued by a grand jury.” President Trump chimed in as well, lauding DOJ for its “decision” to prosecute Mr. Abrego and characterizing the government’s motive: “[M]aybe they just said, look…these judges they want to try and run the country…. I could see a decision being made—bring him back, show everybody how horrible this guy is. And frankly we have to do something because the judges are trying to take the place of a President that won in a landslide.”
Abrego Garcia’s lawyers also point to a U.S. Justice Department whistleblower, who “suffer[ed] grave career consequences as a result” of releasing documents purportedly showing Trump administration officials’ less-than-firm belief in their case and pushing for Abrego Garcia’s “prompt return” from El Salvador.
To hear his lawyers tell it, the government officials’ public comments venting frustration about Abrego Garcia filing suit to secure his return are proof that the prosecution is “vindictive,” and the fact that Abrego Garcia was targeted — while others in similar situations were not — shows the prosecution is “selective.”
“The government’s naked ante-upping against Mr. Abrego — confirmed in the public statements of numerous high-ranking officials — underscores the unreasonableness of its conduct,” they added.
The Maryland man wants the smuggling case against him dismissed, but if Crenshaw not convinced to go that far, then Abrego Garcia wants the judge to order a hearing to go over his claims. He could be released from criminal custody in Tennessee as soon as Friday once U.S. Magistrate Judge Barbara Holmes’s temporary stay expires, and he is requesting a release order that he be returned to Maryland.
Abrego Garcia’s situation has seen a lot of confusion in recent months, not least because the Trump administration’s various agencies haven’t appeared to be on the same page. At one point, the DOJ implored Holmes not to release Abrego Garcia to ICE out of fear the agency would quickly deport him before the DOJ could finish its prosecution.
It was a shocking about-face as the administration’s stance up until that point had been that even though Abrego Garcia was improperly deported to El Salvador, he was nevertheless rightfully expelled from the U.S.
Abrego Garcia has pleaded not guilty to the charges against him, and his attorneys have decried the government’s actions, arguing they have “flouted rather than followed” orders from both the Nashville-based federal court as well as the Supreme Court.
The post ‘Filed as revenge’: Abrego Garcia accuses Trump admin of ‘unprecedented retribution,’ asks judge to dismiss smuggling case first appeared on Law & Crime.
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Author: Conrad Hoyt
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