Kilmar Abrego Garcia lawyers ask court to silence Trump admin after Kristi Noem called him a ‘monster’

Kilmar Abrego Garcia’s attorneys have asked a federal judge in Tennessee to order the Trump administration to stop making statements about his case after Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem publicly called him a “horrible human being” who should “never be released.”

Abrego, a Maryland resident, was erroneously deported in March to El Salvador, and his case became a flashpoint in the Trump administration’s crackdown on immigration, sparking concerns over a lack of due process. He’s now being held in Nashville, Tennessee, on human smuggling charges.

In a filing Tuesday, Abrego’s attorneys asked U.S. District Judge Waverly D. Crenshaw, who is overseeing the human smuggling case, to ensure the government complies with the court’s rules regarding extrajudicial statements to ensure Abrego is afforded a fair trial.

On July 18, Noem held a press conference in Nashville announcing recent arrests of “criminal illegal aliens,” where she made comments about Abrego’s case.

“He has a lifetime history of trafficking individuals and of taking advantage of minors, soliciting pornography from them, nude photos of them, abusing his wife, abusing other illegals, aliens that were in this country, women that were under his care while he was trafficking them,” Noem said. “He’s a horrible human being and a monster, and he should never be released free.”

Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem speaks in Nashville last week.George Walker IV / AP

Abrego’s attorney Sean Hecker wrote in the latest filing: “These comments — made by a sitting cabinet secretary (and one of the Nation’s highest ranking law enforcement officials) in this District, mere miles from the courthouse where Mr. Abrego’s case is pending— are precisely of the type that are most likely to prejudice Mr. Abrego’s right to a fair trial.”

“Secretary Noem assailed Mr. Abrego’s character and reputation, including with verbal insults and allegations that are irrelevant to the offenses charged in the indictment and almost certainly inadmissible at trial,” he continued.

The attorney argued that Noem went out of her way to make the remarks to local press, and the statements “are not just highly likely to taint the jury pool; they appear calculated to maximize the prejudice to Mr. Abrego.”

On July 21, the defense had requested that the government issue a retraction, but the Trump administration did not respond to that request.

The court had already ordered both the government and defense to stop making public statements about Abrego’s case to ensure a fair trial on July 3.

The new filing asks Judge Crenshaw to clarify the requirements of Local Criminal Rule 2.01 in Tennessee, which says a lawyer participating in an investigation or litigation must not make extrajudicial statements that could prejudice a proceeding.

“In light of the July 18 press conference, Mr. Abrego also requests that this Court order the government to notify all officials at DHS that are involved in the investigation of Mr. Abrego, and all officials in their supervisory chain, of the requirement to comply with this Court’s rules regarding extrajudicial statements,” the filing said.

NBC News has reached out to the Department of Justice and DHS for comment.

Abrego, 29, was deported to a notorious mega-prison in El Salvador in March. The Trump administration later said he was deported in an “administrative error.” His deportation was in direct violation of a judge’s order in 2019 that was issued to prevent Abrego’s deportation to El Salvador, where he was born and claimed to have been in danger of gang violence.

He was brought back to the U.S. in June after a high-profile back-and-forth between his attorneys and the federal government. The Trump administration doubled down in painting Abrego as a gang member — claims he denies.

Upon his return to the U.S., he was charged with two federal felonies in the U.S. District Court in Nashville: conspiracy to unlawfully transport illegal aliens for financial gain and unlawful transportation of illegal aliens for financial gain. Abrego has pleaded not guilty to those charges.


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