By Rich Lowry
Tuesday, June 10, 2025
For a while, the favored moniker for Kilmar Abrego Garcia
in the media was “Maryland father.”
Abrego Garcia was indeed living in Maryland and was
indeed a father, but this wasn’t what was the most distinctive thing about him.
There are hundreds of thousands of fathers living in the state who aren’t
illegal immigrants and don’t have ties to criminal gangs.
Abrego Garcia, of course, is the man who was mistakenly
deported to the notorious CECOT prison in El Salvador despite a judge’s order
that he couldn’t be deported there.
Instead of quickly asking for Abrego Garcia to be sent
back to the U.S., the Trump administration dug in its heels and suffered
repeated legal setbacks, including at the Supreme Court.
Sensing political opportunity and appalled at the notion
of someone living in the U.S. being sent, based on no criminal charges, to
perhaps the most inhumane prison in the Western Hemisphere, Democrats made
Abrego Garcia a cause. They inevitably downplayed the drip-drip evidence that
he was an unsympathetic character.
It emerged that he had been picked up by local police in
2019 at a Home Depot years ago and the cops suspected that he and his
associates were gang members. It emerged that his wife accused him of abusing
her. It emerged that he’d been stopped in Tennessee in suspicious circumstances
in 2022 with multiple men in the vehicle.
Whether Abrego Garcia was a good guy or a reprobate, a
member of MS-13 or of his church choir, had no bearing on whether he should
have been imprisoned in El Salvador with our active support. The answer to that
was “no,” regardless, but now that the Trump administration has brought him
back to the U.S. and filed charges against him, the “Maryland father”
description has been exposed as ludicrously inapt.
According to a DOJ indictment, Abrego Garcia routinely
engaged in human smuggling, transporting illegal aliens within the United
States on more than 100 occasions.
The facts set out in the indictment regarding the
Tennessee traffic stop are particularly damning. Abrego Garcia’s story was that
the men in his Suburban had been working construction in St. Louis for two
weeks and he was bringing them back to Maryland. The men, all lacking
identification, didn’t have any luggage or construction tools. The vehicle was
outfitted with a makeshift third row for passengers in the back.
All of which was suspicious enough. What’s more, the
indictment says, license-plate tracking data showed that the car hadn’t been
anywhere close to St. Louis in the past year. It had, however, been in the
Houston, Texas, area, where the prosecutors say the illegal-alien passengers
had been picked up.
The administration will have to prove its charges in
court, and if they have been exaggerated in the cause of nailing Abrego Garcia,
that will presumably be exposed.
The facts matter, and Abrego Garcia never should have
been made into a mere symbol.
The administration seemed to think that keeping him in El
Salvador somehow furthered the cause of immigration enforcement, but whether
Abrego Garcia stayed there or came back to the U.S. wasn’t going to materially
affect deportation efforts one way or the other. For their part, Trump’s
critics — yet again — assumed that because someone was targeted by the
president, he or she must be a figure of righteousness.
The fact of the matter is that Abrego Garcia never should
have been in the United States in the first place. He came here illegally in
2012. Only after he was picked up by police in the aforementioned 2019 stop and
put in deportation proceedings did he make a meritless asylum claim. An
immigration judge nevertheless granted him a withholding of removal and Abrego
Garcia was permitted to go about his business, which, according to the DOJ, was
smuggling other illegal immigrants.
We’ll learn more as the case proceeds, but we know enough
already to conclude that this isn’t a typical or commendable Marylander.
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