A Maryland Senator’s High-Profile Mission to Free a Deported MS-13 Gang Member & Wife Abuser Raises Questions of Motive and Misplaced Priorities
In a move that’s raised eyebrows across Maryland and beyond, Senator Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) jetted off to El Salvador on Wednesday, to champion the cause of Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia, an MS-13 gang member and Salvadoran national deported to El Salvador’s notorious Center for the Confinement of Terrorism (CECOT) mega-prison. The senator’s trip, billed as a mission to “check on” Abrego Garcia’s condition and push for his return to the U.S., has sparked accusations of political grandstanding, with critics arguing it prioritizes an alleged gang member over American citizens’ safety.
Abrego Garcia, 29, was deported on March 15, as part of the Trump administration’s illegal gang immigration crackdown, which saw over 200 illegal immigrant gang members, sent to CECOT. The White House and Attorney General Pam Bondi have labeled Abrego Garcia an MS-13 gang member, a claim his lawyers vehemently deny, pointing to his lack of criminal record in the U.S. or El Salvador.
Denied Access
Van Hollen’s high-profile journey didn’t go as planned. Salvadoran authorities, led by President Nayib Bukele, denied him access to CECOT and refused to arrange a meeting or phone call with Abrego Garcia. Bukele, a close ally of President Trump, has made it clear he won’t release the deportee, framing CECOT as a necessary tool to house “very bad people.” The senator’s inability to secure even a glimpse of Abrego Garcia has fueled criticism that his trip was more about optics than results. Maryland constituents and conservative voices slammed Van Hollen, with some calling him “un-American” for using taxpayer dollars to advocate for a non-citizen while ignoring local issues, like the recent conviction of an illegal immigrant for the brutal murder of Rachel Morin, a Maryland mother of five.
The timing of Van Hollen’s trip couldn’t be worse for his detractors. Just days before, Victor Antonio Martinez-Hernandez, another Salvadoran national, was found guilty of Morin’s 2023 murder, a case that’s galvanized calls for tougher immigration enforcement. Patty Morin, the victim’s mother, publicly expressed outrage, accusing the senator of neglecting American families while chasing headlines abroad. To critics, Van Hollen’s focus on Abrego Garcia—a man the Trump administration insists is a “public safety threat”—seems tone-deaf, especially when the U.S. Supreme Court has already ruled that the government must facilitate his return, a process complicated by El Salvador’s refusal to comply.
Abrego Garcia, who lived in Maryland has a history of domestic violence against his wife, who is 2021 successfully filed for a restraining order against him. Yet, his lawyers contend he’s a victim of bureaucratic overreach, swept up in a deportation frenzy targeting gang members. Van Hollen himself called the situation “unjust,” accusing the Trump administration of lying about Abrego Garcia’s gang ties.
Showboating Publicity Trip
So, why the trip? Critics see it as classic showboating—a senator leveraging a media saturated case, meant to undermine the current administration and to burnish his progressive credentials while sidestepping the devastating effects of open borders and violence during the Biden term. The Trump administration’s deal with Bukele, which includes $6 million in payments to house deportees, underscores the geopolitical stakes, making Van Hollen’s mission look like a symbolic gesture unlikely to sway either leader. Meanwhile, back in Maryland, constituents are left questioning why their senator is expending political capital on a foreign prison visit when local communities are grappling with crime and economic challenges.
As Van Hollen vows to “keep pressing” for Abrego Garcia’s release, the questions linger: Is this a political stuntman or a misguided political hack that puts optics over constituents? For now, Abrego Garcia remains in CECOT, and Marylanders are left wondering whose interests their senator is really serving.