Jan 06, 2026
U.S. Border Patrol Cmdr. Gregory Bovino’s mouth has got him in legal trouble again — this time in Tennessee.In Chicago, a federal judge found that Bovino lied in a court deposition in November about his own use of tear gas in a confrontation with protesters in Little Village.The judge had alrea dy ordered Bovino to wear a body camera and report to her about his agents’ activities during Operation Midway Blitz, which began Sept. 8.Bovino and his agents were in Chicago until mid-November when they launched similar deportation operations in North Carolina and New Orleans before returning to Chicago briefly around the end of the year.Now Bovino is at the center of a legal controversy in Nashville for appearing on FOX News and NewsMax about the high-profile case against Kilmar Abrego, a man from El Salvador facing criminal charges of human trafficking.Lawyers for Abrego have asked the court to sanction the government for violating an October gag order in the case. The request is pending.In his gag order, U.S. District Judge Waverly Crenshaw Jr. had prohibited employees of the Justice Department and Department of Homeland Security from making public out-of-court statements that “have a substantial likelihood of materially prejudicing [this proceeding], including especially that will interfere with a fair trial.”Without referring to him by name, Bovino appeared on TV news shows in mid-December and called Abrego “an alien smuggler,” a “wife beater” and an “MS-13 member;” described judges presiding over his civil and criminal cases as “extremist” and “activist;” and promised that Abrego, who “wants to leech off the United States,” would be taken “out of circulation” and deported. Kilmar Abrego.AP In a Dec. 29 court filing, the government responded to Abrego’s request for sanctions, pointing out that he stood on the steps of a courthouse and proclaimed his innocence while supporters called him a “freedom fighter.”At that Dec. 12 event in Baltimore, a congressman said Abrego was “kidnapped” and was facing “fake charges,” according to the government’s filing, which also noted that Bovino isn’t involved in Abrego’s criminal case. He’s a “non-lawyer in a governmental agency that is not litigating this matter,” the filing said.According to court records, a Tennessee state trooper had pulled over Abrego for speeding in 2022. He wasn’t ticketed but the state police referred his name to Homeland Security Investigations as a possible human trafficker.In March 2025, Abrego was arrested by immigration officials and shipped to his home country of El Salvador where he was housed in a notorious mega-prison. Homeland Security Investigations then closed a file regarding allegations that he was an MS-13 gang member involved in smuggling.But Abrego filed a lawsuit challenging his deportation and won all the way up to the Supreme Court, which on April 10 affirmed his lower court victories. Then Justice Department officials began exploring criminal charges against Abrego related to his 2022 traffic stop and he was indicted on smuggling charges May 21 in Nashville.Abrego is seeking to have his criminal case in Tennessee dismissed, claiming that his prosecution was “vindictive” because government officials were unhappy he was able to overturn his deportation case in court. Related Greg Bovino’s the star of Trump’s deportation show. We trace his roots. Related 10 things to know about Border Patrol boss Gregory Bovino ...read more read less
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