Kilmar Abrego Garcia’s wife shares message ahead of hearing: ‘Continue fighting'

Kilmar Abrego Garcia’s wife shares message ahead of hearing: ‘Continue fighting … God is with us’

by Cassandra Stephenson, Tennessee Lookout
June 13, 2025

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The wife of Kilmar Abrego Garcia — a Salvadoran native who was wrongfully deported to an El Salvador prison as part of the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown — shared a message from him with a crowd gathered at a downtown Nashville church ahead of his arraignment Friday morning:

“Continue fighting, and I will be victorious because God is with us.”

About two blocks down the street, Abrego Garcia awaited his arraignment in federal court on criminal “alien smuggling” charges and a hearing to determine whether he will continue to be detained until trial.

Speaking to a crowd of immigrant rights advocates, union leaders and clergy, Jennifer Vasquez Sura said Thursday marked exactly three months since “the administration abducted and disappeared my husband and separated him from our family.”

It also marked the first time she was able to see him — albeit through a video screen.

Hundreds of miles away, their son, Kilmar Jr., was in Maryland at his kindergarten graduation, she said.


“Our family should have never been in this situation,” she said, her voice choking with emotion. “We should be with our children. Me and Kilmar’s mind is here in Tennessee, but my heart is in Maryland with my kids … My son is alone on his big day, and I’m here fighting for my husband, for his dad, to come back home.”

Abrego Garcia — a 29-year-old Salvadoran native living in Maryland, union sheet metal worker and father of three — was driving home with his five-year-old son when he was pulled over in March. He was detained and mistakenly deported to a notorious Salvadoran prison under allegations of membership in the MS-13 criminal gang. His family says they are false. A court order from 2019 expressly prohibited his deportation to El Salvador, where he fears persecution.

The El Salvador government returned Abrego Garcia to the United States in June to face a grand jury indictment in Tennessee for one count of “conspiracy to unlawfully transport illegal aliens for financial gain” and one count of “unlawful transportation of illegal aliens for financial gain” between 2016 and 2025.

The indictment was issued May 21 but remained sealed until June 6.

The charges are tied to a traffic stop by the Tennessee Highway Patrol in November 2022, when Abrego Garcia was pulled over for speeding about 80 miles east of Nashville while driving an SUV with nine Hispanic men. No charges were filed at the time, but prosecutors now allege that the stop involved smuggling migrants within the United States.

Vasquez Sura said Abrego Garcia spoke of faith and gratitude.

“To everyone who continues to support Kilmar and the fight for justice, Kilmar says, ‘Thank you from the bottom of my heart. God has put us in this path together for a reason. He knows why He does it and what He does, and there’s always a reason we have all come together at this moment,” Vasquez Sura said.

“Kilmar shares that he feels God’s presence with him, as only God knows the darkness he has faced in these past three months,” she said.

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Tennessee Lookout is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Tennessee Lookout maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Holly McCall for questions: info@tennesseelookout.com.

GOP senator who appeared to urinate on self in DUI test caught double-dipping on expenses

Tennessee Sen. Kenneth Yager’s recent arrest while driving a campaign-funded car on a Georgia vacation sheds renewed light on the pitfalls of lawmakers’ not-uncommon practice of dipping into campaign finances to lease or purchase vehicles.

State law doesn’t prohibit this, but does require lawmakers to keep records of vehicle use and reimburse their campaign accounts for any mileage payments they receive from the state and any personal use of the vehicle.

The Tennessee Lookout’s review of campaign finance and state mileage reimbursement records for Yager found that since he began leasing a vehicle in 2017, he has simultaneously collected more than $20,000 in mileage from the state while using his campaign account to pay for gas, maintenance, insurance and other costs typically meant to be covered by mileage reimbursements.

Reached through a Tennessee Senate Republican Caucus spokesperson Friday, Yager said the state mileage reimbursements were an “oversight” paid to him despite him marking “no mileage” on his legislative per diem forms. State lawmakers are paid a per-diem rate intended to offset the costs of traveling to and staying in Nashville during legislative session and official legislative business. The spokesperson said “any mileage reimbursements from the state were received inadvertently and unknowingly to Sen. Yager.”

“To correct this, I will promptly reimburse my campaign account for the mileage discrepancy in question,” Yager wrote in a statement to the Tennessee Lookout.

The exact amount of overlap is difficult to calculate because gas expenses could be used for other trips on official business outside of the legislative session. Since January 2017, he logged nearly $21,500 in gas expenses paid by his campaign account, in addition to oil, maintenance, insurance and other charges typically covered by mileage reimbursement.

Yager, a Kingston Republican, was arrested Dec. 3 in popular tourist town Jekyll Island and faces charges of DUI, hit and run, and failure to stop at a stop sign after hitting another vehicle, police say. He was driving a Ford Edge that appears to bear his Tennessee Senate license plate, according to the Georgia State Patrol’s incident report and footage of Yager’s field sobriety test.

The video also suggested that Yager urinated on himself during the test. Georgia troopers also said Yager tripped and fell.

In a previous statement, Yager said the arrest was an “unfortunate incident” and he will “cooperate fully with authorities to bring (it) to an appropriate conclusion.”

Yager said he used his campaign-funded vehicle for the vacation because his personal vehicle “was not in working order for the longer journey (to Georgia).” He plans to reimburse his campaign account for the car’s December lease payment in compliance with ethics rules, he said.

Bill Young, the executive director of the state’s Bureau of Ethics and Campaign Finance Ethics Commission, said candidates and elected officials are permitted to lease or purchase vehicles and pay for gas and upkeep with campaign funds, “so long as the car is used for campaign or officeholder purposes.”

But he doesn’t recommend it.

“Because of the documentation required and the difficulty of ensuring no personal use of the car, I have discouraged this type of use of campaign funds,” Young wrote in an email to the Tennessee Lookout. “But again, Tennessee’s statutes do not prohibit this scenario.”

Car expenses paid from campaign coffers

Since 2017, Yager has paid nearly $65,312 total to Ford, Lincoln Automotive Financial Services and Harriman-based Jerry Duncan Ford.

He has leased three vehicles, never more than one at a time, according to a spokesperson. He stopped using his campaign account to reimburse himself for mileage when he began leasing his first vehicle, records show.

In total, Yager has spent about $115,345 in campaign funds on the lease and upkeep of those vehicles over the last decade. His car-related expenses include:

$21,491 for gas, $15,828 in reimbursed mileage, $9,194 for car insurance, $2,441 for oil changes, maintenance and repairs, $344 for SiriusXM Radio, $105 for car washes.Yager’s district includes He said he obtained approval from the Bureau of Ethics and Campaign Finance to lease a vehicle to cover “extensive” travel required to serve constituents.

“As the representative of one of the largest geographical districts in the General Assembly, which extends from the exurbs of Nashville to my home in East Tennessee, I sometimes travel up to 1,000 miles per week for both campaign and official state purposes,” Yager said.

Other lawmakers have cited similar reasons for using campaign funds to pay for vehicles.

Sen. Steve Southerland, R-Morristown, spent almost $50,000 in campaign funds to purchase a new car — his third campaign vehicle purchase in the last 10 years, The Tennessean reported in July. He averages 40,000 miles per year in driving related to state business, he told the publication.