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A man from Maryland, who was mistakenly deported to Salvador and detained in one of the most famous prisons, was subjected to “strong beaten” and “torture”, according to new court documents.
Kilmar Abreg Garcia’s lawyers, 29, claimed that the attacks from the guards had left him with visible injuries during the day after arriving in prison.
Earlier, the Trump administration allegedly allegedly Mr. Abreg Garcia was a member of the Salvador gang MS-13, which his lawyers and the family strongly denied.
While officials initially stated that Mr. Abreg Garcia could never return to the United States, in June he was extradited to Tennessee to face human trafficking – which he did not guilty.
According to the new documents of the court, filed on Wednesday as part of the trial, which his wife opposed the Trump administration, Mr. Abreg Garcia and 20 more detainees were repeatedly beaten when they arrived at the center of terrorism, Salvador or Socot.
After the documents, Mr. Abreg Garcia and 20 other deported prisoners “timed to the metal nares without mattresses in a crowded cell without windows, bright lights left for 24 hours a day, and minimal access to sanitary sanitation.”
Mr. Abreg Garcia also claimed that he and other prisoners were “forced to kneel” from 9pm to 6am “and the guards hit those who fell out of exhaustion.”
At one point, the guards allegedly threatened to restrict it to the members of the gangs who “torn” him.
His cruel treatment led to the fact that he lost 30 pounds (14 kg) during the first two weeks after his imprisonment in Salvador, the complaint said.
Trump’s administration asked the federal judge in Maryland, who oversee the case to dismiss the lawsuit, claiming that he had been overtaken after Mr. Abreg Garcia was returned to the United States. The lawsuit was filed by the wife of Mr. Abreg Garcia after deportation.
Mr. Abreg Garcia first entered the US illegally in 2011 and was granted protection against deportation by an immigration judge in 2019, as it was found that it may face the danger from the gangs when he returned to his native El Salvador.
But in March 2025, Maryland’s resident was deported and initially conducted Salvador’s Salvador’s mega, which later admitted that Trump administration officials were a mistake. The judge ordered the government to “promote” his return, but the White House officials initially refused to return it.
Upon returning to the charge in June, Prosecutor General Bondi said “it looks like American justice.”
He denied any violations, and his lawyers named allegations of human trafficking.
At the end of June, the federal judge in Tennessee ruled that Mr. Abreg Garcia was entitled to release, but he remained in prison for the fears of his legal team that he could be quickly deported if he leaves the object.