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Turning Point USA’s Charlie Kirk didn’t mince words: “With zero acknowledgment of their own propaganda, ABC News quietly shifted its reporting on gangbanger and wife-beating illegal Kilmar Abrego Garcia.”
Abrego Garcia’s story is all too familiar to those following the crisis at the border. He entered the United States as a teenager, supposedly fleeing gang violence. Settling in Maryland, he later married a U.S. citizen and started a family. In 2019, he successfully secured deferral of removal protections under the United Nations Convention Against Torture.
But that so-called protection didn’t stop his removal this past March. Thanks to the Trump administration’s firm immigration crackdown, Abrego Garcia was finally deported, despite protests from left-wing activists.

Authorities haven’t minced words about why they wanted him gone. They point to evidence tying him to MS-13 — one of the deadliest criminal organizations in the world. Gang tattoos and a 2022 traffic stop in Tennessee served as major red flags. Although there’s no formal conviction linking him directly to MS-13, conservatives argue that’s no excuse to keep a dangerous individual on American soil.
The legal battle didn’t end with his deportation. A federal judge ordered the administration to reverse course and bring Abrego Garcia back. The Supreme Court upheld that decision, but now the Justice Department claims it’s virtually powerless to act since Garcia has already been sent back to El Salvador.
Meanwhile, ABC News has yet to issue any formal statement explaining why they altered their language — or why they initially tried to frame Abrego Garcia as just another harmless Maryland resident.
Adding fuel to the fire, sources tell ABC News that federal authorities are actively investigating a key incident tied to Garcia’s suspected gang connections: a 2022 traffic stop in Tennessee. During that stop, Abrego Garcia was found crammed into a vehicle along with eight other passengers.
Authorities say the car was registered to Jose Ramon Hernandez-Reyes, a convicted felon currently imprisoned in Alabama. Federal agents recently interviewed Hernandez-Reyes as part of the ongoing investigation into Garcia’s possible criminal ties.
When police questioned Abrego Garcia at the time of the stop, he reportedly told them the group had been working construction jobs in Missouri — a convenient excuse that is now under heavy scrutiny as authorities dig deeper into the real story.
This latest example of media manipulation shows exactly why Americans have lost trust in legacy outlets like ABC News. The truth was inconvenient to their narrative — so they buried it.