Officials said the two leaders will discuss counter-terrorism and other policies in light of the Supreme Court’s decision to order the return of one dispatcher.
President Donald Trump will open his White House door to El Salvador President Naive Buquere on April 14, talking about the use of Buquere’s terror confinement center to house illegal immigrants deported from the United States.
White House press chief Caroline Leavitt told reporters during a press conference that Central America’s national leaders are “visiting to talk about the greatest cooperation ever.”
Authorities point to an agreement between the two countries to incarcerate Trende Lagua and MS-13 gang members at El Salvador’s Terrorist Confinement Centre in a positive move based on mutually beneficial collaboration.
According to the court’s ruling, federal lawyers condemned the “administrative error” in deporting Abrego Garcia.
Leavitt told reporters that interpreting the language of decisions is important to understand the role the government is expected to play in supporting Abrego Garcia.
“The Supreme Court made it very clear last night that it is the administration’s responsibility to promote profits.
She postponed the newly filed, brief, submitted deliberations from the Department of Justice, which challenges the issue in lower courts.
The future of the dispatcher remains unknown, and Trump suggests that El Salvador will determine his fate.
“President Bucchere has politely embraced some of the world’s most violent alien enemies, especially those in the United States,” writes Trump. “These wild bars are now in the sole custody of El Salvador, a proud and sovereign nation, and their future is left to the President (Bukere) and his government.
Abrego Garcia’s lawyers said the government’s tactic to expel alleged illegal immigration claims would place the judicial system’s reputation for the fairness of the issue.
“The government can deport anyone they like anywhere and then make mistakes later,” Simon Sandoval Moschenberg, the male lawyer, told reporters after the Supreme Court found the client’s favor.
Abrego Garcia was arrested on March 12 by an immigration and customs enforcement agent in Baltimore.
His wife, US citizen Jennifer Vazquez Sula, identified him in photographs of a bound exile who later saw him enter a terrorist centre, and later challenged the federal court’s deportation.
On April 4, US District Judge Paula Sinis ordered the federal government to return Abrego Garcia, calling the deportation “completely lawless.”
Abrego Garcia maintains custody of Salvador, where he has lived for just over a month.
According to previous court filings, Abrego Garcia escaped gang threats in her home country as a teenager. He has no criminal history in the United States and has denied federal immigration authorities’ claim that he is affiliated with the infamous MS-13 transnational gang.