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Less than 24 hours after the release of the US authorities, Kilmar Abreg Garcia reported that he could be deported to Uganda, after refusing to accept the guilty agreement in the expected criminal process, his lawyers say.
The lawyers of Mr. Abreg Garcia say they refused to find themselves guilty of accusation of human smuggling in exchange for deportation in Costa Rica -the proposed transaction after it became clear that he would be released from the guardianship on Friday.
Mr. Abreg Garcia, a citizen of Salvadoran, was mistakenly deported to Salvador in March by Trump’s administration, and then returned to the United States in the criminal case.
Officials claim that Mr. Abreg Garcia has ties with the MS-13 criminal gang, the accusation he denied.
The transaction, which will be sent to Costa Rica, was proposed on Thursday after it became clear that Mr. Abreg Garcia would probably be released from prison on Friday.
The Costa -Ryki government agreed to accept him as a refugee and give him a legal status, in a letter from a Costa -Tikan official who is included in the legal supply.
His lawyers now say that after the release of Mr. Obreg Garcia from the federal custody, they were informed about the government’s intention to deport him to Uganda – a country he does not know.
“There may be only one interpretation of these events,” they wrote in the submission. “Doj, DHS and ICE use their collective powers to force Mr. to choose between the Viana, which goes relative security, or the transfer of Uganda, where his safety and freedom will be threatened.”
It is planned that Mr. Abreg Garcia, now in Merilend with his family, will appear in the Baltimore court on Monday. If the judge approve the government’s request, he may face deportation within a few days.
The US has reached bilateral deportation agreements with Honduras and Uganda as part of its illegal immigration repression, According to the documents received by the US partner BBC CBS.
“This is a temporary agreement with the terms, including the fact that people with criminal records and minors will not be accepted,” Baghee Vincent said in a statement.
“Uganda also prefers that people from African countries will be transferred to Uganda.”
The deportation case of Mr. Obreg Garcia became an adaptation of the Trump administration on immigration.
In March, he was deported to his native Salvador and was originally kept in the infamous Szcott prison. But after US government officials acknowledged that he had been deported from the “administrative mistake”, the judge ordered the administration to “promote” his return.
He was returned to the United States in early June and sent to Tennessee, where he was accused of human smuggling scheme. He pleaded not guilty of the charge.
At the end of June, a federal judge in Tennessee ruled that Mr. Abreg Garcia had the right to release, but remained in prison from the fears of his own legal team that he could be quickly deported if he left the object.