More evidence has emerged, indicating that Kilmar Abrego Garcia, an illegal foreigner from deported Salvador, is at least a human trafficker.
A Justice Department source told ABC News that convicted smuggler Jose Ramon Hernandez Reyes was now convicted in federal prison for smuggling illegals, and that Garcia confessed to investigators that he worked for him and transported the aliens elsewhere from Texas.
Garcia's latest news will not help his case. Federal authorities claim he is a member of the MS-13 terrorist gang. Court documents portray him as his brutal wife Beater.
In related developments, the Trump administration cited a “state secret” exemption to avoid publishing documents relating to Garcia in federal courts, records show.
Transport of illegal actors
Garcia, who was deported on March 15th, is at the heart of the courts and political battles between the left and right judges, Democrats and the Trump administration. District Judge Paula Sinis of Maryland District Court ordered the administration to return Garcia to the United States. The administration said it must “promote” his return. The administration has argued that he cannot be returned because he is no longer under federal jurisdiction. They also say that in any case, he will soon be deported again due to his connections with the gang. President of El Salvador, Naive Buquer, says Garcia will be placed.
Along the way, there is growing evidence that Garcia is not the healthy “Maryland father and husband” his supporters claim. And now, with the latest updates from convicted trafficker Reyes, Garcia's far left fangirl has another obstacle to overcome.
In 2022, as New American reported last week, Tennessee Highway Patrol officials stopped illegal Salvadoran due to speeding and failing to maintain lanes. Eight passengers, perhaps illegal, were on the outskirts of Black Chevrolet in 2001, where he drove. He confessed that his license had been suspended. Patrols suspected he had been paid to transport passengers to Maryland.
Garcia confessed that his “boss” owns an SUV and that the “boss” turns out to be Reyes. When officers contacted the Biden administration's FBI, the department told them to let Garcia go.
ABC Report
Currently, ABC reports, Reyes has become a stool pigeon.
They said the 38-year-old Reyes was “a registered owner” of the SUV. Citing the source, they revealed it
A federal agent investigating the Tennessee case is well-versed in the interview, saying that attorneys appeared at a federal correctional facility in Talladega, Alabama, last month to question Hernandez Reyes, who was recognized as limited immunity.
Hernandez-Reyes told investigators he previously ran a “taxi service” based in Baltimore. He claimed he met Abrego Garcia around 2015, and that he had hired him on multiple occasions to transport undocumented immigrants from Texas to various parts of the United States, sources told ABC News. The frequency and time frame of the alleged trips were not immediately clear.
ABC worried that the interrogation would be
A new offensive step in the government's efforts to gather potentially potentially criminal information about the background of Abrego Garcia – despite its resistance, despite its demands that it provide the typical protections to respond to such accusations through the American legal system.
Perhaps, however, the interrogation embodies what the news alone revealed about the suspension.
As New American reported on April 24, the website obtained documents from the Department of Homeland Security about the stop.
Abrego Garcia told the state trooper that the owner was his boss. However, the SUV was separately flagged by the Homeland Security Investigation (HSI) Baltimore Field Office as a target suspected of human trafficking or smuggling, documents show.
The website continues:
“The vehicle is used by HSI Baltimore Targets, a human smuggling/trafficking business. The vehicle travels to the southern border to welcome non-citizens,” the record reads. The memo says that if a vehicle is encountered, it should be notified to the Baltimore HSI case agent.
Jose Ramon Hernandez Reyes, who Abrego Garcia claimed he was at work, had previously been found guilty of smuggling illegal aliens into the United States.
In 2020, Hernandez Reyes, an illegal alien himself, pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 18 months in prison for smuggling fellow illegal alien in the United States after being stopped by Mississippi's law enforcement along with passengers from Mexico, El Salvador and Honduras. Homeland security records show that Hernandez Reyes' “Deport Order” was revived in March 2021, as his 18-month sentence had ended.
Listen on May 16th
Compared to Garcia's deportation, Judge Sinis ordered the Trump administration to prepare for “a formal briefing of the defendants' meaning primarily on the secrets of the state and the privilege of the deliberation process.” Hill reported that “the government has formally invoked the privilege of sealed submission.”
Trafficking and court hearing aside, a robust mountain of evidence links Garcia to MS-13. Similarly, in two petitions for a protection order from the Circuit Court in Prince George County, Maryland, his wife accused him of beating her.
Xinis set up a hearing on May 16th.
Nevertheless, in a complaint that raised nearly $300,000 in GoFundMe's complaint after the Trump administration returned Garcia to El Salvador, where he belonged, Garcia's wife portrayed him as a great man who was mistakenly taken from his family.
When audio of her appeal to the judge was released for protection, she explained the petition by saying at the time “neither of us were in a good place.” Garcia claimed that “we were hurt from the time he spent in ice detention and we were suffering from COVID.”
It doesn't deny that Garcia beat her to pulp.