Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Odd how the regime is no longer interested in proving him committed a crime…
There is no need, he has a final deportation order and isn’t staying no matter how hard you and Van Hollen cry.
Really? You have a crystal ball and can see into the future now?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Odd how the regime is no longer interested in proving him committed a crime…
There is no doubt he committed a crime. Multiple crimes.
If he is in Uganda, he can no longer traffic humans in the US. That is fine with me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Odd how the regime is no longer interested in proving him committed a crime…
There is no need, he has a final deportation order and isn’t staying no matter how hard you and Van Hollen cry.
Anonymous wrote:Odd how the regime is no longer interested in proving him committed a crime…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Uganda. Lol, hilarious 😂.
You have a sick sense of humor to find something so senseless and cruel funny. Even Uganda, a country known for human rights violations and violence, didn't want this -- they specifically agreed to take Africans.
He was initially sent back home to Salvador. That wasn't good enough for him. FAFO.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Uganda. Lol, hilarious 😂.
You have a sick sense of humor to find something so senseless and cruel funny. Even Uganda, a country known for human rights violations and violence, didn't want this -- they specifically agreed to take Africans.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Uganda. Lol, hilarious 😂.
You have a sick sense of humor to find something so senseless and cruel funny. Even Uganda, a country known for human rights violations and violence, didn't want this -- they specifically agreed to take Africans.
Anonymous wrote:Uganda. Lol, hilarious 😂.
Anonymous wrote:Odd how the regime is no longer interested in proving him committed a crime…
Anonymous wrote:Because the judge, who has no jurisdiction to hear the case, is not being overruled by higher courts, and is protecting this person.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kilmars lawyers made "BIG MISTAKE" by pushing for his return to U.S.
If he's found guilty, he's gonna spend a long time in prison complaining about his ideological radical lawyers, who made a hero out of him and tried to get him back to the United States when that was not in his own self-interest.
If he's acquitted, they can still bring the deportation charges because the standard of proof is very different in deportation charges ... From the government's point of view, it's a win-win to do it this way.
Have you seen the photos of CECOT? Anyplace is better. A US jail. Deportation. The whole point is that they sent him to a hell hole illegally.
Apparently he wasn't in CECOT. They had him in another jail. Either for PR purposes, or they didn't agree with the MS-13 designation.
Now he will be there after his US prison sentence, or perhaps after sentencing, they will send him back to El Salvador.
I've read his withholding of removal no longer applies.
I suspect the withholding of removal to El Salvador doesn’t apply but I haven’t seen confirmation of it.
Agree his deportation orders still apply.
He will never walk free in the US.
This didn't age well:
"Kilmar Abrego Garcia was released from jail in Tennessee on Friday so he can rejoin his family in Maryland while awaiting trial on human smuggling charges."
https://apnews.com/article/abrego-garcia-jail-release-deportation-trial-6eb8e95da3bfb7b7ed89dc156702b295
It aged fine, he’s not free. He’s on house arrest and will be deported in a few days.
He isn’t on house arrest. We’ll see about deportation, but I’m suspecting Judge Xinis will be quite displeased at the fact that the regime lied her again and she’ll make sure he doesn’t go anywhere.
Why wouldn’t he be deported? He has a deportation order, there are no grounds for him to stay. He couldn’t be deported to a certain country, so he won’t be.
Anonymous wrote:Odd how the regime is no longer interested in proving him committed a crime…
Because the judge, who has no jurisdiction to hear the case, is not being overruled by higher courts, and is protecting this person.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kilmars lawyers made "BIG MISTAKE" by pushing for his return to U.S.
If he's found guilty, he's gonna spend a long time in prison complaining about his ideological radical lawyers, who made a hero out of him and tried to get him back to the United States when that was not in his own self-interest.
If he's acquitted, they can still bring the deportation charges because the standard of proof is very different in deportation charges ... From the government's point of view, it's a win-win to do it this way.
Have you seen the photos of CECOT? Anyplace is better. A US jail. Deportation. The whole point is that they sent him to a hell hole illegally.
Apparently he wasn't in CECOT. They had him in another jail. Either for PR purposes, or they didn't agree with the MS-13 designation.
Now he will be there after his US prison sentence, or perhaps after sentencing, they will send him back to El Salvador.
I've read his withholding of removal no longer applies.
I suspect the withholding of removal to El Salvador doesn’t apply but I haven’t seen confirmation of it.
Agree his deportation orders still apply.
He will never walk free in the US.
This didn't age well:
"Kilmar Abrego Garcia was released from jail in Tennessee on Friday so he can rejoin his family in Maryland while awaiting trial on human smuggling charges."
https://apnews.com/article/abrego-garcia-jail-release-deportation-trial-6eb8e95da3bfb7b7ed89dc156702b295
It aged fine, he’s not free. He’s on house arrest and will be deported in a few days.
He isn’t on house arrest. We’ll see about deportation, but I’m suspecting Judge Xinis will be quite displeased at the fact that the regime lied her again and she’ll make sure he doesn’t go anywhere.
Why wouldn’t he be deported? He has a deportation order, there are no grounds for him to stay. He couldn’t be deported to a certain country, so he won’t be.
Anonymous wrote:Guess he will be headed to Uganda since he declined the plea offer.
Oh, well.