Mr. Obama, Mr. Clinton and/or Mr. Biden would have called the contractor immediately, and said "look -- we have been ORDERED by our Supreme Court, to get the man back on US soil, for hearings into his removability. We made a mistake. Under that $6 million a year contract -- you know the one, at CECOT, right? -- we have with you (for holding detainees offshore), we have an error correction mechanism. We here invoke that clause. Our US agents will be on site tomorrow morning to collect him. Have him ready to go, and fed breakfast by 6 am. . . ."
Or something largely along those lines. But Tangerine 2.0? Rubio? Noem?! They preposterously claimed, in sworn filings in federal court in Maryland that this risks some goofy (global?!) détente breach. As though El Salvador was Red China or North Korea, in this Kabuki theater episode. The endless repeating of sensitive diplomatic negotiations. . . is beneath the dignity, of any savvy elected official or business person, even. It is a contract. Move forward; if El Salvador balks -- and they won't -- simply terminate the $6 million a year payouts. Here is just a bit of Rubio's duplicity, for the record:
. . .I am aware that, in a further Order dated April 22, 2025, this Court determined that "information regarding Abrego Garcia's removal, as well as his placement and confinement in CECOT", as well as the identities and roles of any individual who has been involved in such actions is relevant and probative in this matter. ECF 100 at 4-5. . . .
I have concluded that the disclosure of certain information that has been requested by Plaintiffs, including through interrogatories, document production requests, and through questions asked and expected to be asked during deposition testimony, could reasonably be expected to cause significant harm to the foreign relations interests of the United States and relatedly, the national security interests of the United States.
When the United States seeks to remove individuals to a foreign country, the United States must negotiate the logistical details of that removal with the foreign country. This requires nonpublic, sensitive, and high stakes negotiation with the foreign State. Those negotiations cover sensitive issues, such as the nature of the working relationship between the United States and the destination country's government and migration policies that may impact regional neighbors; sensitive factual details or foreign policy priorities revealed in the course of highly sensitive negotiations; and the content of those negotiations, such as the categories of individuals a country may be willing to consider accepting or information necessary to facilitate removals and subsequent entry into the receiving country, which can impact the foreign State's willingness to accept the removed aliens and the procedures it will employ in doing so. Compelled disclosure of any sensitive communications or discussions with the Government of El Salvador regarding Abrego Garcia's removal and confinement in CECOT and Centro Industrial threatens significant harn to the United States' foreign affairs and national security interests. The same is true for information regarding the details of and discussions with the Salvadoran government regarding specific steps the United States has or has not taken, or will take or elects not to take, to facilitate Mr. Abrego Garcia's release from custody and/or return to the U.S. . . .
What a load of useless crap. Simply invoke your contractual rights, with the contract prison. End of story. But for these jamokes, the cruelty -- and foot-dragging -- is being used as an official terror policy. Each of you dissidents, in the US -- know that Trump wants you to think you could be the next one dropped into a meat-grinder in a foreign land, and left for dead.
Do NOT fall for these stupid lies. USDC Judge Xinis has not been fooled; the DC Circuit and Ninth Circuit have not been fooled -- and once again, last night. . . the US Supreme Court was not fooled. Obey the rule of law, you incompetent, malignant clowns. Out.
नमस्ते






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