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The court hears new arguments about Trump's attempts to return wrongly-deported men

On Friday, a U.S. Judge will consider claims that the administration of President Donald Trump is failing to provide sufficient details regarding its efforts to bring a Maryland man back to Maryland after being wrongfully sent to prison in El Salvador.

The hearing in Greenbelt is the latest test of the Trump administration’s deportation Kilmar Abrego Garcia, whose return U.S. district judge Paula Xinis, and the U.S. Supreme Court, have both ordered that the government "facilitate" amid concerns about the administration's failure to comply with their orders.

Xinis is scheduled to hold a hearing at Greenbelt, Maryland on Monday, January 15, 2018, starting at 1:00 p.m. Eastern Time. This will be to examine the government's claim that the information sought by Abrego Garcia’s lawyers are state secrets. His lawyers claim that the administration is hiding the information in an improper manner.

In a Monday court filing, his lawyers said that "even though the government freely speaks about Abrego Garca in public it insists on confidentiality in this litigation."

Abrego Garca was deported from El Salvador to El Salvador despite a court order that protected him. Democrats and legal analysts are concerned about his case, as they believe that Trump's government is willing to ignore the judiciary branch of government.

Xinis ordered last month that the administration provide more information on what it is doing to ensure Abrego Garcia’s return. She had previously stated that the administration hadn't given her any useful information about its efforts.

Officials in the administration have accused courts for interfering with executive branch foreign policy.

The government has used the privilege of state secrets, a legal doctrine which allows it to prevent the disclosure information that may harm national security, in order to hide details about the return efforts for Abrego Garcia.

In a filing to a federal court this week, the U.S. Department of Justice stated that Abrego Garcia’s lawyers had "all the necessary information" for them to confirm compliance with the court’s order regarding his return. Blake Brittain in Washington and Mike Scarcella, who edited the story.

(source: Reuters)