US wants to withhold details in Kilmar Abrego Garcia case. Judge will
hear arguments
[May 16, 2025]
By BEN FINLEY and MICHAEL KUNZELMAN
A federal judge in Maryland will hear arguments Friday over whether the
Trump administration can invoke the state secrets privilege to withhold
information about bringing Kilmar Abrego Garcia back to the United
States.
U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis ordered Abrego Garcia’s return from El
Salvador in April and has since directed the administration to provide
documents and testimony showing what it has done, if anything, to
comply.
Trump administration lawyers claim many of those details are protected,
including sensitive diplomatic negotiations. Revealing the specifics
would harm national security because foreign governments “would be less
likely to work cooperatively with the United States,” they argued in a
brief to the court.
Abrego Garcia’s lawyers contend the administration hasn’t shown “the
slightest effort” toward retrieving him after his mistaken deportation.
And they point to President Donald Trump’s interview last month with ABC
News, in which he said he could bring Abrego Garcia back but won’t.
“Even as the Government speaks freely about Abrego Garcia in public, in
this litigation it insists on secrecy,” Abrego Garcia’s lawyers wrote to
the court.
The focus of Friday’s hearing will be a legal doctrine that is more
often used in cases involving the military and spy agencies. Xinis’s
ruling could impact the central question looming over the case: Has the
Trump administration followed her order to bring back Abrego Garcia?

The Trump administration deported the Maryland construction worker to El
Salvador in March. The expulsion violated a U.S. immigration judge’s
order in 2019 that shielded Abrego Garcia from deportation to his native
country because he faced likely persecution by a local gang that had
terrorized his family.
Abrego Garcia’s American wife sued, and Xinis ordered his return on
April 4. The Supreme Court ruled on April 10 that the administration
must work to bring him back.
Xinis later lambasted the administration for failing to explain what it
has done to retrieve him and instructed the government to prove it was
following her order. The Trump administration appealed, but the appeals
court backed Xinis in a blistering order.
The debate over state secrets privilege is the latest development in the
case.
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This undated photo provided by Murray Osorio PLLC shows Kilmar
Abrego Garcia. (Murray Osorio PLLC via AP)

In a legal brief filed Monday, Trump administration attorneys said
they provided extensive information, including 1,027 pages of
documents, to show they’re following the judge’s order.
They argued that Abrego Garcia’s legal team is now “attempting to
pry into the privileged inner workings of the U.S. government
apparatus and its communications with a foreign government.”
“Nearly all the additional materials Plaintiffs demand are protected
by the state secrets and deliberative process privileges and so
cannot be produced,” U.S. attorneys wrote.
In their brief, Abrego Garcia’s attorneys urged the judge to be
skeptical, writing that the state secrets privilege “is not for
hiding governmental blunders or malfeasance.”
Abrego Garcia’s lawyers noted that U.S. attorneys claim in court to
be following Xinis's order, while “senior officials from the
President on down were saying precisely the opposite to the American
public.”
For example, they cited an April 16 statement from Attorney General
Pam Bondi, who said, “He is not coming back to our country.”
“Over and over again, official statements by the Government — in
congressional testimony, television interviews, and social media —
confirm that producing this information would not imperil national
security,” Abrego Garcia’s attorneys wrote.
The hearing is scheduled to start at 1 p.m. in federal court in
Greenbelt.
Trump administration officials have said Abrego Garcia was deported
based on a 2019 accusation from Maryland police that he was an MS-13
gang member. Abrego Garcia denied the allegation and was never
charged with a crime, his attorneys said.
The administration later acknowledged that Abrego Garcia's
deportation to El Salvador was " an administrative error ” because
of the immigration judge's 2019 order. But Trump and others have
continued to insist that Abrego Garcia was in MS-13.
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