Federal judge blocks ICE from re-detaining Kilmar Abrego Garcia, orders release despite criminal case
A federal judge has barred the Trump administration from placing Kilmar Abrego Garcia back into immigration custody, converting a previous emergency order into a longer-term injunction that keeps the Salvadoran illegal immigrant free on release conditions while a criminal case against him moves toward a pivotal hearing.
U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis ruled Tuesday that the administration failed to provide any "good reason to believe" it plans to remove Abrego Garcia to a third country in the "reasonably foreseeable future." The ruling means Abrego Garcia remains in the United States, subject to conditions imposed by ICE and bound by the terms of a separate criminal proceeding in Nashville.
The case has become one of the most legally tangled immigration disputes in the country. And at its center sits a man the Department of Homeland Security alleges has ties to MS-13, who was living in the U.S. illegally, and who was accused in court records of repeated domestic violence against his wife.
How a deportation became a courtroom saga
According to a Fox News report, Abrego Garcia was deported to El Salvador in March in what Trump officials acknowledged was an "administrative error" that violated a 2019 court order. The details of that original order remain sparse in public filings, but its existence gave Xinis the jurisdictional foothold she has used ever since.
In June, Abrego Garcia was returned to the United States. He was taken into federal custody in Nashville and detained on human smuggling charges stemming from a 2022 traffic stop. The Justice Department had opened a criminal investigation and presented it to a grand jury at the same time Abrego Garcia was detained in a Salvadoran prison.
That timing matters. In October, U.S. District Judge Waverly Crenshaw ruled that Abrego Garcia had established a "reasonable likelihood" that the criminal case against him was the result of vindictive prosecution by the Justice Department. Crenshaw ordered the administration to produce internal documents and government witnesses to testify about its decision to bring the case. A key hearing on a motion to dismiss is scheduled for next week in Nashville.
So the federal government deported him, was forced to bring him back, charged him with a crime, may have that charge thrown out as retaliatory, and now cannot detain him through immigration enforcement either. Each step has compounded the legal mess rather than resolving it.
A judge with a pattern
Xinis has maintained what can fairly be described as a confrontational posture toward the administration throughout this case. In June, she criticized government discovery filings as "vague, evasive and incomplete," accusing officials of a "willful and bad faith refusal to comply with discovery obligations." In December, she went further, saying DOJ lawyers "affirmatively misled the tribunal."
Her Tuesday ruling continued that tone. She wrote that the administration attempted what she called "phantom removals," referencing government efforts to send Abrego Garcia to "three (maybe four) African countries." Between August and December, the administration tried and failed to arrange removal to Liberia, Eswatini, Uganda, and briefly Ghana. None of those efforts materialized into anything concrete.
Xinis was blunt in her assessment:
"Indeed, since Abrego Garcia secured his release from criminal custody in August 2025, respondents have made one empty threat after another to remove him to countries in Africa with no real chance of success."
She also noted that the government had not obtained the final notice of removal order necessary to proceed with deportation, a fact she first flagged in late November. And she pointed out that the administration "refused to procure Abrego Garcia's immediate removal to Costa Rica," which Abrego Garcia himself had identified as his preferred third country of removal.
"Respondents have done nothing to show that Abrego Garcia's continued detention in ICE custody is consistent with due process."
The result: he stays out, under ICE-imposed release conditions and the constraints of his Tennessee criminal matter.
The administration pushes back
DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin responded to the court's earlier emergency order with a statement that applies to the broader trajectory of the case:
"This order lacks any valid legal basis, and we will continue to fight this tooth and nail in the courts."
Senior DHS and Justice Department officials have previously suggested they would appeal Xinis' orders. Neither agency responded to requests for comment on the Tuesday ruling.
The administration's frustration is understandable. Here is an illegal immigrant with alleged gang ties, a domestic violence record documented in court filings, and a human smuggling charge, walking free because a federal judge has decided the government's detention and removal efforts don't pass constitutional muster. The legal system is functionally shielding him from the consequences of his own illegal presence.
The domestic violence question nobody wants to discuss
Lost in the procedural warfare is the human cost to the people closest to Abrego Garcia. Court records document accusations of repeated domestic violence against his wife, including protective order filings that detailed multiple incidents of physical abuse. His wife later withdrew the protective order request and has defended her husband publicly.
That withdrawal does not erase the filings. It raises uncomfortable questions that the legal teams on both sides seem content to leave unexamined while they fight over jurisdictional theory and removal logistics.
What this case really represents
The Abrego Garcia saga has become a microcosm of everything broken in the immigration enforcement apparatus. Consider the sequence:
- A 2019 court order prevents deportation to El Salvador
- He is deported anyway, in an acknowledged administrative error
- A federal judge orders him brought back to the United States
- The government charges him with human smuggling
- A second federal judge finds evidence that the charges may be retaliatory
- The government tries to deport him to four African countries, none of which agree to take him
- The first judge blocks immigration detention entirely
- He remains in the United States, free, with criminal charges potentially collapsing
Every actor in this chain, from the bureaucrats who botched the original deportation to the judges who have made his return a personal crusade, has contributed to an outcome that serves nobody. The administration cannot enforce immigration law against a man who is here illegally. The courts have created a procedural fortress around someone accused of gang affiliation, domestic violence, and human smuggling. And the legal system grinds on, consuming resources and attention while the underlying question goes unanswered: why is this man still in the country?
The initial error was real. Deporting someone in violation of a court order is a serious matter, and the administration rightly acknowledged the mistake. But what has followed is not justice correcting an error. It is a judicial apparatus using that error as permanent leverage, converting a procedural misstep into a de facto grant of immunity from immigration enforcement.
Next week's hearing in Nashville will determine whether the criminal case survives. If Judge Crenshaw finds vindictive prosecution, the human smuggling charges disappear. If they disappear, the last thread connecting Abrego Garcia to any form of federal accountability snaps.
An illegal immigrant with alleged MS-13 ties, a documented history of domestic violence accusations, and a pending smuggling charge will be free in the United States because the government made a paperwork error, and two federal judges decided that error outweighs everything else.




