Kilmar Abrego Garcia team wants Trump officials' depositions
Share and Follow

Inset: Kilmar Abrego Garcia in updated photo (CASA). Background: President Donald Trump speaks with reporters as he signs executive orders and proclamations in the Oval Office of the White House, Monday, May 5, 2025, in Washington (AP Photo/Alex Brandon).

Attorneys for Kilmar Abrego Garcia, the Maryland man admittedly “wrongfully” deported to El Salvador in violation of court orders, are asking the judge in the case to end what they describe as an ongoing regime of secrecy.

In a 31-page memorandum of law regarding privilege assertions, the attorneys are pressing U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis to overrule objections that allow the Trump administration to discuss issues without the other side present and file documents under lock and key.

The passage of time and the government’s admissions loom large in the heavily-redacted effort to bring transparency to the case.

The filing begins by noting that a “full month has passed since” the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously found that Abrego Garcia “was subject to a withholding order forbidding his removal to El Salvador, and that the removal to El Salvador was therefore illegal.”

Love true crime? Sign up for our newsletter, The Law&Crime Docket, to get the latest real-life crime stories delivered right to your inbox.

“Yet Abrego Garcia remains in El Salvador, and the Government has produced no evidence showing that it has made the slightest effort to facilitate his release,” the memo reads. “To the contrary, the President has insisted on national television that, although he has the power to bring Abrego Garcia back, he won’t, because his lawyers have advised him against it.”

In late April, in response to a question from ABC News, President Donald Trump said he “could” just pick up the phone and have the Salvadoran president return Abrego Garcia to the United States. But, Trump added, “we have lawyers that don’t want to do this.”

One of 19 attachments to the plaintiff’s filing — inclusive of 18 exhibits and one declaration — contains a brief transcript and write-up of Trump’s comments to ABC News anchor Terry Moran.

And that admission, Abrego Garcia’s attorneys say, flies in the face of the government’s efforts to otherwise maintain secrecy in court.

This juxtaposition comes as part of an ongoing bid to force the Trump administration into complying with discovery about “the truth as to the Government’s efforts (or lack thereof) as well as its abilities to facilitate Abrego Garcia’s return.” This, the plaintiffs insist, is “the essential issue” in the case.

“Over and over, the Government has stonewalled Plaintiffs by asserting unsupported privileges — primarily state secrets and deliberative process — to withhold written discovery and to instruct witnesses not to answer even basic questions,” the memo goes on. “Even as the Government speaks freely about Abrego Garcia in public, in this litigation it insists on secrecy.”

The attorneys argue the state secrets privilege is clearly not implicated by any of the facts in a case about “a single mistakenly removed individual” who is simply trying to get flown back to the United States “so that he can get his day in court.”

“No military or intelligence operations are involved,” the memo continues, “and it defies reason to imagine that the United States’ relationship with El Salvador would be endangered by any effort to seek the return of a wrongfully deported person who the Government admits never should have been removed to El Salvador in the first place.”

Aside from the basic thrust of the state secrets claim, the plaintiffs say the government has not even properly invoked the privilege.

Under relevant Supreme Court precedent from Global War on Terrorism cases, the memo notes, the privilege has to be invoked by department heads “based on actual personal consideration.”

Share and Follow
You May Also Like

Ex-Karen Read Investigator Abandons Fight for Reinstatement After Dismissal for Misconduct

A Massachusetts State Trooper, dismissed from his position due to unprofessional conduct…

Tragic Bonfire Altercation Leaves High School Cheerleader Brain Dead: A Community in Mourning

An Alabama man faces murder charges after a bonfire gathering on Sunday…

Can Samuel Alito’s 1986 Insights Be the Key to James Comey’s Legal Conundrum?

Left: U.S. Associate Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito Jr. attends inauguration ceremonies…

Police Report: Man’s Sudden Braking Propels Girlfriend from Vehicle

Inset: Lamireon Robinson (Navarro County Justice Center). Background: East 13th Avenue in…

Police Report: 27-Year-Old Man Allegedly Shoots High School Cheerleader and Three Others

Left: Steven Tyler Whitehead (Jefferson County Sheriff”s Office). Right: Kimber Mills (GoFundMe).…

Driver Fatally Shot After Honking Incident: Police Report

Inset: Deborah Benefiel (Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department). Background: Intersection of West 38th…

Tragic Incident: Mother Charged After Leaving Infant Unattended in Bathtub for 14 Minutes Leading to Drowning

Inset: Courtney M. Newsom (Craighead County Sheriff’s Office). Background: The area in…

DOJ’s Key Alina Habba Arguments: What Transpired

Left: Alina Habba walks off stage after speaking before Republican presidential nominee…