FAIRFAX, Virginia — Kilmar Abrego Garcia wasn't an activist and he didn't choose to become locked in to what has become one of the most contentious immigration issues of the Trump administration, his lawyer told The Associated Press on Monday.
But as he experiences some of the few days he's had with his family since being sent erroneously to an El Salvador prison in March, his lawyer said he's still hoping for a just resolution to his case.
''He's been through a lot, and he's still fighting,'' said his lawyer Simon Sandoval-Moshenberg during an interview with AP following Abrego Garcia's court-ordered release from detention last week. ''What it is he can fight for is circumscribed by the law and by the great power of the United States government, but he's still fighting.''
Abrego Garcia's mistaken deportation to El Salvador helped galvanize opposition to President Donald Trump's immigration policies. He was held in a notoriously brutal prison there despite having no criminal record.
U.S. officials claimed Abrego Garcia was an MS-13 gang member, an allegation he denies and which he wasn't charged for. He was later charged with human smuggling, accusations his lawyers have called preposterous and vindictive.
The Trump administration fought efforts to return him to the U.S. but eventually complied. Since then, his case has been a twisted turn of legal filings and wranglings that has seen Abrego Garcia, a Salvadoran national, released from detention once since March — and that time just for a weekend — while the government has pursued smuggling charges against him and announced plans to deport him to a series of African countries.
Then last week, a federal district court judge in Maryland ordered him to be released and barred the government for now from detaining him again until a hearing can be held in his case, possibly as early as this week, said Sandoval-Moshenberg.
The Department of Homeland Security criticized the judge's decision to release him last week and vowed to appeal, calling the ruling ''naked judicial activism'' by a judge appointed during the Obama administration. On Monday, Homeland Security declined to comment for this story, citing restrictions on public comments put in place by a judge in Tennessee.