Bulwark Takes - Revealed: Trump’s Deportation Lies and Smears Unravel Fast
Episode Date: April 16, 2025The Trump administration is openly defying the Supreme Court and refusing to reverse the wrongful deportation of an innocent man they claim is linked to MS-13. The Washington Post’s Greg Sargent rev...eals shocking new details about the faulty evidence, shady investigations, and the dangerous precedent this case sets for due process in America. Trump’s Case Against Man Deported in “Error” Just Took Another Big Hit
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Hi, this is Andrew Egger with The Bulwark. We've been covering a lot this story of the
wrongfully deported man to El Salvador, Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who the Trump administration is
really digging in their heels, resisting even the Supreme Court's directives that they need to do
what they can to get him back. A lot of what we have focused on with this story is the, you know,
just the kind of top level due process concerns, the legal wrangling and the kind of wildly
expansive power to deport without an adversarial
judicial process that the Trump administration is, is insisting that it has. The administration
has insisted that he is in fact an MS-13 gang member and that they have a lot of good reasons
to believe that. And they hang their hat in that, in that assessment, very largely on one brush that,
that this man had with a cop who picked
him up on suspicion of, of being in company of gang members years and years ago. But, but new
details about that encounter, about how that all went down in the first place continue to come out.
And, and Greg Sargent with the New Republic had a great piece out yesterday, breaking some new news.
Just, it really just shines a spotlight on just how flimsy and pretextual all of this is.
Greg, thanks for coming on to talk to me a little bit about this today.
Great to see you, Andrew.
Yeah, we're in a bit of a role reversal here.
I've been on your show, and this is the first time you've probably been on other Bulwark products.
This is the first time I've been in the host chair with you, so thanks for coming on.
Maybe give a little bit more background on what the administration is claiming with regard to this to this guy's record.
What we already knew, you know, kind of before yesterday and then what you have have dug up yourself.
So we have to go back to 2019 for this, which is when Kilimar Abrego Garcia was picked up the first time. He was ultimately detained by ICE, but in the
process of getting to ICE, he was detained by the Prince George's County Police Department.
Prince George's County is a suburb of Washington, D.C., just northeast and southeast of D.C.
This was in the northern part. This is in Hyattsville. It was where he was picked up at
a Home Depot in Hyattsville. So what where he was picked up at a Home Depot in Hyattsville.
So what happened was the detective then questioned him. Detectives questioned him and asked him if he had ties to MS-13. He said no. They transferred him to ICE. He was not
charged with a crime of any kind related to gang activity. He was only transferred to ICE by virtue
of the fact that he was in the country illegally.
He had come in 2011 at the age of 16 from El Salvador.
This is where we get to what the Trump administration
is arguing.
At the time, a Prince George's County detective
filled out what's known as a gang field interview sheet.
That lays out what the detective thinks is the evidence
of this man's supposed ties to MS-13.
You've heard the evidence that talked about endlessly.
One of the pieces of evidence is that he was wearing a Chicago Bulls jacket and hoodie that was doctored up in a supposedly gang-like way.
The other is that a quote-unquote confidential source
said that he was a member of MS-13, the Westerns clique, but that happens to operate in New York,
which is not a place he's ever lived. But the core thing here, and I'll try to make this quick,
is that all this comes from this gang field information sheet filled out by this one
detective. And we were able to establish that the detective subsequently was suspended for serious professional misconduct,
sharing confidential police info with a sex worker.
He was ultimately indicted for that as well, put on probation. And so the short version is that that casts a whole lot of doubt on the core piece
of evidence that the administration is claiming links him to MS-13. We're essentially going off
of the word of a guy who was not, you know, not only is he not a judge, not only is he not a jury,
he's not even particularly reliable or trustworthy, it seems, as a cop. So can you talk to me a little
bit about how you ran all this down, how this stuff has come out, and why we're only hearing
about some of this stuff for the first time? So from the plaintiff's side, what the court
papers lay out is a little bit cryptic in some regards, and that's what gave me kind of the
opening to pursue it. What they say is that at the time in 2019, when they were contesting the effort to
deport Abrego Garcia that first time, they tried to talk to the chief detective on the case.
They wanted to contest the evidence that he had offered, quote unquote evidence, of his membership
in MS-13. And they were informed, say the court papers, that this detective was suspended. That's
all the court papers say. They don't say who the detective was or why he was suspended because they
didn't know at the time. The plaintiffs were unable to establish that. They were simply told
by PGPD, the Prince George's Police Department, that he had been suspended. And so looking into
that a little more, we were able to get this
gang field interview sheet, and it had the name of the cop on it, and it had the quote-unquote
evidence that he had offered. And a little digging showed that he had been suspended for
these serious transgressions. So that's how we got there. I want to clarify one point, though, even if we had an enormous mountain of evidence that made it absolutely 100 percent certain that Abrego Garcia was a member of MS-13, he would still be entitled to due process. his hearing in court over the current deportation and this deportation that they've done to this
maximum security prison in El Salvador would still be illegal. Yeah. And just to follow up on what
you were just saying, I don't know if you saw the post that J.D. Vance made this morning. The
administration has been basically flailing all through their response to this whole scandal
in the wake of the Supreme Court ruling that
essentially said, no, they do have to go and get this guy back. They're continuing to stonewall
that in court. They're continuing to do this very bad faith reading of the court's ruling,
essentially saying, well, we think that when they say that we have to try to go get that guy back,
we don't actually really, really have to. That's still basically our prerogative.
The lower court judge isn't really hearing it. The White House is making all kinds of insane
statements about it. Trump in the Oval Office. And then this morning, J.D. Vance basically made
a post on Twitter where essentially what he says is, look, like all you guys who are making these
crying about due process is what he said. All you people are crying about due process. Well, what's your plan? What's, what's, what's your plan that could, that could satisfy your,
your oh, so precious due process concerns and still let us deport millions of people a year.
You know, obviously we got to deport millions of people a year. So I don't know, our hands are
kind of tied. We just got to do it. And, and I mean, like that's, it was such a striking thing
to have him, have him come out and, and not just say, we are giving these guys due process,
not just tell that lie, which is kind of what they've been doing. They've been saying the
process has been adequate. But to kind of scoff at the entire idea that anyone would stick up for
any process considerations for these people. Yeah. And by the way, I'd like to actually answer
J.D. Vance's question, at least with regard to
Kilmar Obrego-Garcia right here. At any time, the administration has the option of bringing him back
to the United States and retrying him for deportation. They don't have to let him go free
forever, right? What they can do is they can actually reopen and challenge the judge's initial grant of withholding of removal.
They can say we are recontesting that. We think we have the right to deport him to El Salvador, which is the thing that his withholding of removal status prevented.
Alternatively, they can say we are going to deport Abrego Garcia to a third country, not El Salvador. And they have the right
to do that under the withholding of removal order, because the withholding of removal order says
you can't deport him to El Salvador. So J.D. Vance is absolutely full of shit when he says
this stuff. Let's just be very clear. And he knows it. He's trained in the law, I think. And so why they won't just
reopen the case is a huge mystery about this whole thing that still hasn't been answered.
The more you look into any one facet of this, the more you really just get the sense that
far from just sort of trying to triangulate for fewer illegal immigrants in the country, the White House is going about this in a way that the thing that they are interested in maximizing at all points in time is their own personal discretionary power vis-a-vis any other part of the government.
And obviously that goes a lot farther than just immigration as well. Yes, I think you're actually putting your finger on a really core depravity about all this, right, which is that they actually want to dispense with due process altogether for migrants.
I mean, that's basically what J.D. Vance is more or less saying. He said it elsewhere as well. As you say, there's always the option of hiring more immigration judges. Look, here's the thing, Andrew. They actually do have a problem on their hands, meaning the Trump administration, for their deportation agenda. Due process is an obstacle
to removing people on the scale that they want to remove them, right? But they won't hire more
immigration judges and scale up the system in order to speed up the processing and maximizing
the processing of people precisely because it would grant due process. What they're actually trying to do is dispense with
that. J.D. Vance made that very clear this morning when he makes kind of the rhetorical pivot from
what they have been saying about Kilmer Abrego Garcia. Well, you know, oh, I can't believe all
these people would stick up for due process for this MS-13 gang terrorist,
as they say, you know, like, like, come on, guys, like, like, get your heads out of the sand. This guy's a real bad guy. I can't believe you would say he needs due process. But then, I mean,
very nakedly in this post this morning, J.D. pivots from that. And he and he is essentially
making this this broader case against due process for the millions of illegal immigrants who are otherwise here,
many of whom have no connection. I mean, the vast majority of whom have no connection to gang
activity, no criminal charges of any kind, no, would not be able to, you wouldn't be able to
wrestle up criminal charges against them. Even if you put like an FBI tail on them, they're just,
they're just not committing crimes. They're law abiding people. And, and it's, it's the,
it's the rhetorical pivot,
not just that they're willing to defy the Supreme Court over this guy they say,
erroneously, it seems, is a gang member, but also that they openly are
desiring and preparing to also try to eliminate due process for the much broader group of people
in the country illegally, is I, the other part of this,
as you say. Yes, I think that's a way of interpreting what they're doing with
Abrego Garcia. In fact, they're actually trying to establish a precedent by which they don't have
to give these people due process and by which the actual facts of their case don't matter at all.
Maryland Senator Chris Van Hollen announced last night that he was heading to El Salvador to try to spotlight this case, going to the Seacott prison there to to I guess he's going to try to go inside.
I don't know whether that's likely to to be permitted or anything like that.
I think they're looking for proof of life. Right. Yeah. Is that what they're doing?
Yeah. Yeah. Among other things. And he's trying to talk to talk to some officials down there. What do you I'm curious what you make of that as kind of a counter messaging strategy from Democrats here to kind of like personally participate in this in this process to a greater degree than before.
I think they have to do it.
You know, I don't know what the politics of this are exactly.
I think probably immigration as a general matter is most likely a net negative for Democrats right now.
But we got to remember that public opinion
on immigration is usually kind of thermostatic, right? It tends to shift against the people in
power. This is a thing that everybody conveniently forgets. But when Donald Trump was president and
was pursuing a restrictionist immigration agenda, it was unpopular. It was not popular. In fact,
Joe Biden ran ads at the end of the campaign in the
swing states on immigration about the caging of children. And so I think they have to go out there
and make the case against lawlessness as a broad strategy. What they have to be saying is that
we're looking at world historical levels of corruption and lawlessness from this administration on every
conceivable front, they can connect all those dots. The bottom line is what Democrats have to do as a
party is sound the alarm and make loud noise about the lawlessness we're seeing. And so that entails
doing big gestures like going to El Salvador. You know, I think that the American people, they support
mass deportation when you ask them, do you want undocumented immigrants removed from the country?
When you pull it that way, yes or no, you will get support for it. But if you offer the choice
to respondents of, do you want undocumented immigrants removed or do you want those who haven't been convicted
of any crimes of any other sort to be able to have a path to legalization, you usually get
majority support of the latter, which tells me that in theory, the American people sort of tilt
against the Democrats on immigration. And they sometimes vote that way because of the way our
public debate is really distorted and convoluted. I don't think the American people would support
the idea of this father of three being removed without any due process, right? And that's exactly,
by the way, why they keep saying he's an MS-13 gang member and a threat to public safety.
That's the core of their excuse for not giving him due process.
If you just roll back the historical tape, it was it was radioactive in Trump's first term.
It was it was maybe the maybe the the family separation policy might have been.
I'm trying to I'm trying to most prominent, if not the only time that the Trump administration just abandoned a signature policy effort purely due to mass public outcry. of creating some problems for Joe Biden later, right, where he feels like he has kind of boxed himself into a more permissive immigration regime than he necessarily would have otherwise because
of the way he talked on the campaign trail. And so he then becomes slow to react to this large
surge in migration that we see during his term. And that pushes public opinion far the other way,
where there's this sense of, wait, the border's just open. I mean, I know that, you know, that's, those are charged terms. Obviously the border was not
open, but they see lots and lots of people, you know, coming into the country and they're like,
well, hey, we got to do something about this. And then that becomes a political strength for
Donald Trump. And so now the pressure is to, to keep that, keep that wheel turning, to really
spotlight, you know, the, the things people weren't thinking about when they thought, well,
yeah, let's get all these people out of our country. Well, what's that mean? Right. And
that's the that's the argument. That's the that's the place where persuasion plays a role and is
potentially fruitful. So I agree with you on all that stuff. I think the through line on immigration
and public opinion in America is this. The public wants law and order. It wants an immigration
system that makes sense. The public gets turned off by images of disorder, chaos, and human suffering, including the suffering of migrants.
And so when Donald Trump was president, you had all this disorder at the border, you know, because people were coming here.
No matter what he says, people were still coming here when he was president.
Right. So they saw imagery of people arriving at the border,
they saw imagery of migrants suffering, and they turned against Trump. Similarly, when Biden became
president, they saw a lot of the same imagery. And by the way, we should note that Republicans
won't allow a democratic administration to solve the immigration problem and fix the immigration
system in a way that
actually would minimize human suffering, which would entail some of the stuff you talked about
earlier, like hiring more immigration judges, scaling up the asylum system to process more
people, creating more pathways to come in legally in an orderly way so you don't have to try it
through illegal means or through asylum claiming. Because Republicans won't allow that, it's a very clever trick on their part, because the result is that when Democrats are in power, the public sees those cases like Abreu Garcia's and say, saying this is what they actually mean when they talk about restoring
law and order and removing people.
That is such a contrast, right?
I mean, the idea that that what they are pursuing by defying the Supreme Court and throwing
aside due process and sidelining the entire judicial system is law.
I mean, that's just, when you put it that way, it's really, really striking. Okay, well, thank
you, Greg, for coming on, talking through your reporting, talking through all this stuff with us.
We appreciate you taking the time. And thanks to everybody out there in TV land watching and
listening to us. We hope you'll like and subscribe and share it with your friends. This stuff's
really important, and we'll continue to cover it. So thanks for watching, and we'll see you next time.