A federal judge from the United States called him “extremely worrying” that the administration of President Donald Trump did not comply with his court order to provide details about the state of a Maryland resident illegally deported to El Salvador.
At a tense audience on Friday, the United States District Judge, Paula Xinis, demanded that the administration identify the people of Kilmar Abrego García, who was sent to El Salvador on March 15.
He also required daily updates about the administration’s efforts to ensure his return.
Abrego García, a Salvadoran migrant, had lived in Maryland under a court order that protected him from deportation since 2019. He had been in the United States since 2011, then said he fled from gangs that sought him for recruitment in his country of origin.
His wife and son are American citizens. But on March 12, he was arrested and arrested by immigration agents and customs compliance with the United States who interrogated him about alleged gang membership.
He was deported on March 15 in one of the three high profile deportation flights to El Salvador that also included the alleged violation of Venezuelan gang members in the 2019 court order.
Abrego García’s family sued to challenge the legality of his deportation, and on April 4, Xinis ordered the administration to “facilitate and make” his return. The Trump administration challenged that order in the Supreme Court, which confirmed the order of Xinis, but said that the term “effective” was uncle and can exceed the authority of the court.
The Supreme Court also ordered the Trump Administration to take measures to facilitate the release of Abrego García de la Custody in El Salvador and detail the steps he has tasks, and will take, to return to the United States.
Xinis repeatedly pressed a government lawyer on Friday for answers about what he had done to recover Abrego García.
“Where is he and under whose authority?” Xinis asked.
“I am not asking for state secrets,” he added. “All I know is that he is not here. He was forbidden to send him to El Salvador, and now I am asking a very simple question: where is he hears?”
“I am not sure what to take the fact that the Supreme Court has spoken quite clearly and, nevertheless, I can get an answer today about what it has done, in any case, in the past.”
‘The life and security of a man are at risk’
Drew Ensign, a lawyer from the United States Department of Justice, said the Government would comply with the Supreme Court ruling. He repeated what the Administration had said in the judicial documents: that would provide the information required for the end of Tuesday next week, once it has evaluated the ruling of the Supreme Court.
“We simply believe that court’s deadlines are impracticable, but that does not mean that the Government does not intend to comply with the order of the Supreme Court,” Ensign said.
Xinis ordered Ensign to provide daily updates, even if only to say that the government intends to comply with the order of the Supreme Court, but the administration believes that its deadlines were not realistic.
The ruling of the Supreme Court also said that the lower court should clarify its order “with the due consideration of the defend” to the executive branch of the Government.
The administration said in a presentation of the earliest court on Friday that it was “unreasonable and impracticable” to say what their next steps are before they are agreed and examined.
“Foreign issues cannot operate in judicial terms, partly because it involves specific sensitive considerations of the country totally inappropriate for judicial review,” said the government’s presentation.
But Abrego García’s lawyers questioned the reasons for the Trump administration for the delay.
In their own presentation on Friday, they alleged that “the government continues to delay, obfuscate and mock the judicial orders, while the life and security of a man are at risk.”

Abrego García’s wife, Jennifer Vásquez Sura, said the order has been an “emotional roller coaster” for his family and the entire community.
“I am waiting anxiously for Kilmar to be here in my arms and in our house, putting our children to bed, knowing that this nightmare is almost at an end. I will fight continuous until my husband is at home,” he said.
The case highlights the tensions of the administration with federal courts. Several have blocked Trump’s policies, and judges have expressed their frustration with the administration’s efforts to avoid complying with judicial orders.
In the case of Abrego García, the Trump administration has remained firm that its deportation was justified.
In a presentation on April 7 before the Supreme Court, the Department of Justice declared that, although Abrego García was deported to El Salvador through “administrative error”, his real elimination of the United States “was not a mistake.”
The error, the department’s lawyers wrote, was specifically transferred to El Salvador despite the deportation protection order.