
U.S. District Judge Waverly D. Crenshaw Jr. has canceled next month’s human-smuggling trial of Kilmar Abrego Garcia—an asylum seeker erroneously deported in 2018 and later ordered back to the United States—saying there is sufficient evidence the government may be prosecuting him in retaliation for winning his return. The judge set a January 28 hearing where prosecutors must justify why the case should proceed or risk dismissal.
Garcia, who fled gang violence in El Salvador and is married to a U.S. citizen, had previously been granted protection from removal. Advocates say his case illustrates how aggressive enforcement actions can boomerang into costly litigation and chilling effects on other bona-fide asylum seekers.
Whether you’re an HR manager guiding transferees or an individual planning cross-border travel, VisaHQ can streamline the visa and immigration paperwork that helps prevent exactly the kind of status gaps now at issue in Garcia’s case. Its online platform (https://www.visahq.com/united-states/) tracks deadlines, flags document deficiencies, and connects users with experienced specialists, reducing the risk of inadvertent overstays or removal orders.
For global-mobility teams, the decision is a reminder that removal orders—even erroneous ones—can have long-term consequences for employees and their family members. Companies with Central American assignees should ensure legal status is impeccably documented and monitor any legacy deportation or voluntary-return records that could be resurrected under stricter vetting regimes.
If the indictment is thrown out, attorneys expect Garcia will pursue damages, potentially adding to the government’s settlement exposure in wrongful-deportation cases.
Garcia, who fled gang violence in El Salvador and is married to a U.S. citizen, had previously been granted protection from removal. Advocates say his case illustrates how aggressive enforcement actions can boomerang into costly litigation and chilling effects on other bona-fide asylum seekers.
Whether you’re an HR manager guiding transferees or an individual planning cross-border travel, VisaHQ can streamline the visa and immigration paperwork that helps prevent exactly the kind of status gaps now at issue in Garcia’s case. Its online platform (https://www.visahq.com/united-states/) tracks deadlines, flags document deficiencies, and connects users with experienced specialists, reducing the risk of inadvertent overstays or removal orders.
For global-mobility teams, the decision is a reminder that removal orders—even erroneous ones—can have long-term consequences for employees and their family members. Companies with Central American assignees should ensure legal status is impeccably documented and monitor any legacy deportation or voluntary-return records that could be resurrected under stricter vetting regimes.
If the indictment is thrown out, attorneys expect Garcia will pursue damages, potentially adding to the government’s settlement exposure in wrongful-deportation cases.











