This case is wild—like something out of a legal drama, but it’s painfully real.
The government admits it wrongly deported Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a man who had been granted protection from deportation years ago… and now they’re basically saying, “Oops, our bad—but we can’t (or won’t) fix it.”
The kicker? DOJ attorney Erez Reuveni openly tells the judge he doesn’t know how or why Abrego Garcia was even arrested, then gets suspended the next day. And now the Justice Department is appealing the court order to bring the guy back, arguing that it’s constitutionally overreaching to demand the U.S. engage with a foreign government like that.
But here’s the ethical crux: if the government violated the law by deporting someone they were legally bound to protect, shouldn’t they be obligated to correct it, foreign diplomacy be damned?
Judge Xinis seems to think so—and Abrego Garcia’s lawyer isn’t wrong to call out the performative outrage without actual follow-through. Meanwhile, the White House is still doubling down on claims that Abrego is MS-13, even though no solid proof has been presented and his legal status was previously validated.
It’s a legal mess that shines a harsh light on immigration enforcement gaps and raises a huge question: what happens when the system makes a mistake but refuses to own the fix?
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