Kilmar Abrego Garcia was beaten, tortured in El Salvador prison, court filing says
The filing in federal court on Wednesday, July 2, also says that Abrego Garcia experienced "severe sleep deprivation" and nutrition so inadequate that he lost 31 pounds while he was at the Terrorism Confinement Center, also known as CECOT, in Tecoluca, El Salvador.
Abrego Garcia, a 30-year-old native of El Salvador living in Beltsville, Maryland was mistakenly deported and taken to CECOT in March. The Trump administration has admitted in court documents that Abrego Garcia's deportation was a mistake, which it blamed it on an 'administrative error.'
The new details from Abrego Garcia's treatment at CECOT come as part of a lawsuit filed by his wife against the Trump administration, which is seeking to have the matter thrown out because he has since been returned to the United States.
An indictment accuses Abrego Garcia of conspiring to bring immigrants into the United States illegally from various Central and South American countries. He has pleaded not guilty.
Here's what else you need to know.
When Abrego Garcia arrived at CECOT on March 15, "he was repeatedly struck by officers when he attempted to raise his head," according to the court filing.
"Welcome to CECOT. Whoever enters here doesn't leave," a prison official told Abrego Garcia, the filing says.
After Abrego Garcia stripped and was issued a prison uniform, he was "kicked in the legs with boots and struck on his head and arms to make him change his clothes faster," the filing says. "His head was shaved with a zero razor, and he was frog-marched to cell 15, being struck with wooden batons along the way."
Abrego Garcia and about 20 other Salvadorans were forced to kneel from 9 p.m. to 6 a.m., "with guards striking anyone who fell from exhaustion," the filing says. "Abrego Garcia was denied bathroom access and soiled himself."
Though prison officials determined Abrego Garcia wasn't affiliated with a gang and was kept separate from gang members, guards repeatedly threatened to transfer him to their cells, where they would "tear" him apart, the filing says.
"Screams from nearby cells would ... ring out throughout the night without any response from prison guards," the filing says.
Within the first two weeks, Abrego Garcia "suffered a significant deterioration in his physical condition and lost approximately 31 pounds," dropping down to about 184 pounds, the filing says.
Abrego Garcia's lawsuit, which names multiple members of the Trump administration, says that they were "aware that the government of El Salvador tortures individuals detained in CECOT."
"Indeed, U.S. President Donald Trump has made comments to the press expressing glee and delight at the torture that the Government of El Salvador inflicts upon detainees in CECOT," the filing adds.
Tricia McLaughlin, a spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security, said in a statement earlier this week that Abrego Garcia "is a dangerous criminal illegal alien."
"We have said it for months, and it remains true to this day: he will never go free on American soil," she said.
A federal judge in Tennessee ordered Abrego Garcia's release last week, though he remained jailed as lawyers wrangle over the logistics.
The father of three was thrust into the spotlight when the Trump administration erroneously deported him in March despite a court order barring the U.S. government from sending him back to El Salvador. Government attorneys said his deportation was an "administrative error."
In April, a federal judge ruled that the administration had acted illegally in deporting Abrego Garcia and ordered officials to return him to the United States. The Supreme Court upheld that ruling and ordered the administration to begin the process of releasing him, but officials resisted bringing him back until he was indicted on the human smuggling charges in May.
Federal prosecutors want Abrego Garcia to remain behind bars as he awaits trial, arguing that he is a member of the violent gang MS-13, a designated terrorist organization, and could flee or intimidate other witnesses if he is released. Abrego Garcia denies being a member of the gang and contends the charges don't justify holding him in jail.
Contributing: Michael Collins, Kelly Puente, and Ruben Montoya, USA TODAY
(This story was updated to add new information.)
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Kilmar Abrego Garcia was tortured in El Salvador prison: Lawyers
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
28 minutes ago
- Yahoo
US Apparel Imports From China Fell to a 22-Year Low in May Amid Trade War Escalation
Clothing imports from China fell to a 22-year low in May and were down by more than half (52 percent) from the same period in 2024 amid escalating tariff tensions between Washington and Beijing that have since resulted in a patched-up trade truce. For the first time in decades, China's share of apparel imports into the U.S. market dropped below 10 percent. May saw the sourcing superpower account for just 9.9 percent of clothing imports—a precarious plummet from the year-ago period, when China represented 19.9 percent of all apparel brought into the American market. More from Sourcing Journal Trump Announces 30% Duties on EU, Mexico Trump Hits Canada With 35% Tariffs Too Much Space, Too Little Demand: China-US Freight Rates Keep Crashing The May trade insights, compiled by University of Delaware professor of fashion and apparel studies Dr. Sheng Lu using U.S. International Trade Commission (USITC) data, revealed that tariff rates on fashion products (especially steep duties on China-originating goods) ballooned beyond levels seen in the modern era. As a result of the Trump administration's reciprocal tariff regime, the average tariff rate for U.S. apparel imports grew to 23.8 percent in May, up several points from the already record-setting 20.8 percent seen in April (and substantially higher than the 13.9-percent average rate in May 2024, and even the 14.7-percent rate of January 2025, before the president's second term began). China predictably faced the brunt of that burden for several weeks after a tit-for-tat spate of escalating tariff threats between President Donald Trump and Chinese trade officials. On April 9, the president set a 145-percent duty rate on China-originating products—an unprecedented measure that was reversed on May 12 when U.S. cabinet officials traveled to Geneva to meet with their Chinese counterparts and broker a truce that brought down the duty rate on both sides significantly. The duty hike had the effect of driving down apparel imports from China significantly, but those that did enter the U.S. market during May faced tariff rates averaging at an unprecedented 69.1 percent, up from 55 percent the month prior, 37 percent in March and 22.1 percent in January. Lu calculated the applied tariff rate on apparel by dividing the duty rate by the value of imports. All told, while the overall value of apparel imports decreased 7 percent year over year, import duties grew by almost 60 percent during the same time frame. 'In May, I think the most of the [average apparel tariff] increase was because of China. And for the rest of the world, they were charged a 10-percent universal tariff rate. Some products, especially those from Asia, were able to enter [the country] in May before the new tariff rate hit,' Lu said. Across the board, all countries paid more duties on apparel in May than they did in previous months due to the universal baseline tariff. Vietnam's average apparel import duty rate reached 25.9 percent, up from 20.5 percent in April, while Bangladesh saw a similar percentage jump from 17.8 percent to 21.1 percent month over month. India's average clothing tariff rate climbed from 15.8 percent to 20.1 percent, while Cambodia's increased from 19.7 percent to 24.6 percent. There were winners to be found in May, however, and their growing import values correlated with manageable tariff rates. Mexico, for example, saw its average import duties paid on apparel products decrease from a negligible 2.2 percent in April to 1.4 percent in May—nearly the same rate it paid one year ago. But Mexico's apparel import values jumped considerably year over year, by 12.2 percent. The country's apparel imports are covered by the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), giving them duty-free access. However, the country still only accounted for 4.6 percent of U.S. apparel sourcing in May. The biggest players are still the Asian nations, many of which have received letters this week from the Trump administration regarding their new, double-digit tariff rates. They also faced threats against transshipment, or rerouting products from other countries with the goal of evading tariffs. Lu, like other experts, believes the reference may allude to the administration's intent to revisit of content requirements and Rules of Origin, as true transshipment of finished goods is already illegal. In his view, 'The signal is very clear—the Trump administration not only wants to decouple from China, but it wants Asian countries to decouple their supply chains from China.' But the Trump administration's long-held goal of encouraging Asian nations to abandon China as a partner 'does not appear to be realistic, at least in the near to medium term,' with so much dependence on the country for inputs, he said. For example, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) data from 2020 (the latest year for which insights are available) showed that about 55.4 percent of the value of Vietnam's textile and apparel gross exports contained content added from other countries—including 26.6 percent contributed by China. UNComtrade data was even more stark, showing that China accounted for 63.8 percent of the $16.6 billion in textile imports to Vietnam in 2023, a 'notable increase' from 37.4 percent in 2010. Like other developing countries with limited capabilities to manufacture certain fabrics and components, Vietnam still relies on imported raw materials. Meanwhile, the country represented the biggest apparel supplier to the U.S. in May, accounting for 21.7 percent of clothing imports. Limiting or discouraging access to the imported raw materials needed to produce apparel products could easily threaten Vietnam's stability as a sourcing base, Lu believes. The same is true for many of America's current top suppliers, which in May included Bangladesh (which accounted for 9.7 percent of U.S. apparel import market share), Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA-DR) countries (10.4 percent), India (8.2 percent), Indonesia (5.1 percent), Cambodia (5.2 percent) and U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) members (5.5 percent). As companies brace themselves for the impact of the incoming duties, they're caught between a rock and hard place. 'Even though the situation between China and the U.S. has stabilized, and there's a deal out there, companies still see sourcing from China as having huge risks,' Lu said. 'They want to source from more countries, but they remain mainly looking at Asian countries, because they need these sourcing designations to be ready to provide products immediately.' There are 'not too many options' in terms of mature sourcing markets with the capabilities and capacity to take on production at scale, aside from 'second-tier emerging sourcing destinations in Asia' that are tight with China and about to be hit with steep duties themselves. Lu believes that despite those conditions, companies will continue to move into sourcing locales like Vietnam and Bangladesh, with the hope that more beneficial trade terms might be reached. 'They are developing countries, they don't pose any national security threat toward the U.S., and they're not the focal point of Trump's trade policy,' Lu said. 'So there's a hope that some kind of deal can be reached before the August deadline.' Error while retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Details emerge about pot-farm immigration raid as worker dies
Trump administration officials defended the aggressive campaign to find and deport unauthorized immigrants even as a cannabis farmworker was taken off life support two days after he plunged from a roof amid the mayhem of a Ventura County raid. The death of Jaime Alanís Garcia, 57, announced Saturday by his family, comes amid a climate of increasing tension marked by weeks of militaristic raids, street protests and violent melees involving federal agents. Alanís' family said he was fleeing immigration agents at the Glass House Farms cannabis operation in Camarillo on Thursday when he climbed atop a greenhouse and accidentally fell 30 feet, suffering catastrophic injury. But the Department of Homeland Security said that Alanís was not among those being pursued and that federal agents called in a medevac for him. Federal authorities said afterward that they detained 361 purported unlawful immigrants in the crackdowns at the site in Camarillo and another cannabis grow operation in Carpinteria owned by the same company, as well as protesters who allegedly sought to shut down the raid. Four U.S. citizens were arrested on suspicion of assaulting or resisting officers, according to the DHS. Alanís was taken to the Ventura County Medical Center, where he was put on life support. His niece announced his death Saturday on a GoFundMe page, which described him as a husband, father and the family's sole provider. The page had raised more than $149,000 by noon Sunday, well over its initial $50,000 goal. "They took one of our family members. We need justice," the niece wrote. In a statement, the Mexican Secretariat of Foreign Affairs said consular staff in Oxnard were providing assistance to Alanís' family. Consular officials said they were accompanying Alanís' family both in California and in his home state of Michoacán, in central Mexico, where, according to news accounts, his wife and a daughter still reside. In addition, Mexican officials said they would expedite the return of his remains to Mexico. Alanís was not the only Glass House worker to take to the roofs. Irma Perez said her nephew, Fidel Buscio, 24, was among a group of men who climbed atop the high glass greenhouses. He sent her videos, which she shared with The Times, that showed federal agents on the ground below, and told her the workers had been fired at with tear-gas canisters. One image shows the broken glass of the roof. In another, Buscio has blood on his shirt and his arm is bandaged, she said. He eventually was apprehended. Federal officials said that among those picked up in the raids were 14 minors. Several of the teens had no parent with them, officials said. Because of that, federal officials said the legal cannabis farm, one of California's largest, is now under investigation for unspecified child labor violations. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, speaking at an event Saturday in Tampa, Fla., told reporters that getting the children out of the farm was part of the plan from the start. 'We went there because we knew, specifically from casework we had built for weeks and weeks and weeks, that there was children there that could be trafficked, being exploited, that there was individuals there involved in criminal activity,' she said. The Labor Department's regional office did not respond to questions from The Times regarding current or past investigations of Glass House Farms operations, or of the local labor contractor Glass House used. That company, Arts Labor Services, did not respond to a request for an interview made through its attorneys. Glass House has said it did not violate labor law. The assertion of a prior child labor investigation comes on the heels of a federal judge's order barring federal immigration officials from picking up people at random, based on their ethnicity or occupation. U.S. Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Rodney Scott said Saturday on X that one of the men apprehended in the raid had a criminal record for kidnapping, attempted rape and attempted child molestation. Noem decried what she called the 'horrendous' behavior of demonstrators who protested Thursday's raid in Camarillo, referencing videos showing rocks being hurled at the vehicles of federal agents, breaking windows. 'Those individuals that were attacking those officers were trying to kill them," she said. 'Let me be clear. You don't throw rocks at vehicles like that, and you don't attack them like that, unless you are trying to do harm to them physically and to kill them and to take their life.' Decades of work helping cannabis workers through the ordeals of federal drug raids didn't prepare Ventura County activist Sarah Armstrong for the mayhem and trauma she witnessed during the Glass House Farms raid, she said. A military helicopter swung low over fields to flush out anyone hiding among the crops, while federal agents fired tear-gas canisters at protesters lining the farm road. In the crush of events, someone shoved a gas mask into Armstrong's hands and pulled her to safety. "It was, in my opinion, overkill," the 72-year-old woman said. "What I saw were very frightened, very angry people." Also among those on the protest line was Cal State Channel Islands student Angelmarie Taylor, 24. She said she saw several agents jump on her professor, Jonathan Anthony Caravello, 37, after he attempted to move a person in a wheelchair after a tear-gas canister landed underneath it. She said the agents fired the tear gas after Caravello and others refused to move out of the way of agents' vehicles. The show of force came without any warning, she said. 'They didn't gave us a dispersal order. They didn't say anything," she said. Caravello is being held at the Los Angeles Metropolitan Detention Center. U.S. Atty. Bill Essayli issued a statement on X saying Caravello is being charged with assaulting, resisting or impeding an officer. The professor was arrested on suspicion of throwing a tear-gas canister at law enforcement and will appear in court Monday, Essayli said. Friends had been trying to find Caravello since he was detained Thursday and were able to confirm his location only on Saturday, attorney Vanessa Valdez of Libre_805 told The Times after a news conference outside the detention center Sunday. Valdez said she began helping Caravello's students and friends on Friday "who checked local jails, hospitals and couldn't find him. We had a good idea he would likely be here [the federal Metropolitan Detention Center] but they would not confirm he was there on Friday." Valdez said she finally met briefly with Caravello on Sunday and was surprised to learn he was being held in one of the detention center's Special Housing Units. "That's usually where they hold the more serious offenders, but my client has no criminal background and the officers who were helping me to see him were very surprised," she said. U.S. District Judge Maame Ewusi-Mensah Frimpong on Friday issued a temporary order finding that agents were using race, language, a person's vocation or the location they are at, such as a car wash or Home Depot, to form 'reasonable suspicion' — the legal standard needed to detain someone. Frimpong said the reliance on those factors, either alone or in combination, violates the 4th Amendment. Her ruling also means those in custody at a downtown federal detention facility must have 24-hour access to lawyers and a confidential phone line. Noem on Saturday accused the judge of "making up garbage." "We will be in compliance with all federal judges' orders," said Noem, contending the judge "made up" things in the ruling. "We're going to appeal it, and we're going to win," Noem added. Times staff writer Patrick J. McDonnell in Mexico City contributed to this report. Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.


New York Times
2 hours ago
- New York Times
Trump Canceled Their Salaries. These Health Workers in Uganda Showed Up Anyway.
In April, I stood on the soft green lawn of the home of a retired police captain in Uganda, surrounded by older women with H.I.V. The crowd, which included many grandmothers, wore formal outfits, fit for church, a show of respect and appreciation for the team arriving from a clinic 30 minutes away to deliver the antiretroviral drugs that kept them alive. They watched in grave silence as a nurse, pharmacists and counselors from the AIDS Support Organization (TASO) in Tororo unpacked their drugs, pharmacy log books and other supplies. When a counselor jokingly chided them, 'Why aren't you happy to see us?' the crowd offered a perfunctory cheer. Then clients said that they'd heard news of the Trump administration's changes to foreign aid. Many of them wept as they explained their fear that TASO Tororo wouldn't come as scheduled. A grandmother of 12, fearing for the survival of her teenage granddaughter, also living with H.I.V., pleaded to me, an American, to convince whoever in my government had put the program in jeopardy to relent. 'Change the heart,' she begged repeatedly, then collapsed forward, her body shaking. It was 20 years ago that I made my first visit to Tororo, Uganda. A rural community where roughly a third of residents live on less than a dollar a day, Tororo is a world away from Washington. But the U.S. Senate could influence the fate of H.I.V.-positive people there this week. Lawmakers have until July 18 to vote on a bill, known as a 'rescission package,' that would slash $900 million for global health, including $400 million for the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, or PEPFAR, which supports H.I.V. treatment worldwide. It has saved 25 million lives since it was established by President George W. Bush 22 years ago. The package retroactively approves the unlawful actions of the Department of Government Efficiency, which in January and February halted foreign aid and other spending already approved by Congress. While Secretary of State Marco Rubio approved a waiver to continue PEPFAR's lifesaving services, including the distribution of antiretrovirals, the maelstrom of grant cancellations and terminations at the U.S. Agency for International Development left the H.I.V. program in chaos. This was evident in Tororo. When the medical team arrived with drugs for the grandmothers and other clients in April, they hadn't received salaries for three months as a result of a canceled grant. Nor had TASO staff members, who support more than 120,000 people across the country. And yet, counselors, doctors, nurses and peer educators kept showing up. Many counselors and educators also have H.I.V., and they told me that abandoning their clients was unthinkable. Mr. Rubio has positioned himself as a champion of PEPFAR. And indeed, his waiver, PEPFAR's operational structure (it has been housed in the State Department and implemented by multiple government agencies since it began) and the work of volunteers like those in Tororo have kept the program operational, even as U.S.A.I.D. formally shut down this month. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.