Trump Insists Abrego Garcia Has MS-13 Tattoo Despite Evidence of Altering

During an interview with Terry Moran of ABC News on Tuesday, President Trump insisted that the man his administration had mistakenly deported to El Salvador had a gang name tattooed on his hand.“On his knuckles,” Mr.Trump said, “he had MS-13.”Pause the tape.
Rewind it to about a week earlier, when Mr.Trump in a social post held up a photograph of the man, Kilmar Abrego Garcia, showing him with four tattoos, one on each finger.
There was a leaf, a smiley face, a cross and a skull.Above those symbols the alphanumeric term “MS13” had been superimposed onto the photo, essentially serving as a caption, decoding the tattoos.
(Some gang experts have questioned whether they are truly MS-13 symbols.)In the interview with Mr.Moran, the president appeared to believe that the characters that had been typed onto the photo he triumphantly held up in his social media post were in fact tattoos themselves.
Mr.Moran gingerly tried to correct the record about that, but Mr.
Trump was having none of it.“Wait a minute,” he said.“Hey, Terry.
Terry.Terry.”Mr.
Moran tried again: “He did not have the letter —”“Don’t do that,” Mr.Trump cut in.
“M-S-1-3.It says M-S-1-3.”When Mr.
Moran said that those characters had been photoshopped onto the picture, Mr.Trump looked positively mutinous.
The exchange went around and around as the president continued to claim, with increasing exasperation, that these numbers and letters that he so badly wanted the world to see did in fact exist in ink on this man’s knuckles.He could not bring himself to admit that Mr.Abrego Garcia did not have the words “MS-13” tattooed on his hand.We are having trouble retrieving the article content.Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.Thank you for your patience while we verify access.
If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.Thank you for your patience while we verify access.Already a subscribe...