The Federation angrily rejected "any allegation that associates us with a foreign political programme, or with a strategy of 'entryism'".
President Donald Trump has acknowledged he has the ability to bring Mr Abrego Garcia back to the US, but that he will not do so.Mr Abrego Garcia denies he is a member of the gang and he has not been convicted of any crime.
BBC Verify has examined court documents and public records to determine what's known – and what is still unknown – about Mr Abrego Garcia and his alleged ties to MS-13.Mr Abrego Garcia has acknowledged entering the US illegally in 2012,In March 2019 he was detained along with three other people in Hyattsville, Maryland, in the car park of a Home Depot.
Officers at the Prince George's County Police Department said the men were "loitering" and subsequently identified Mr Abrego Garcia and two of the others as members of MS-13.In a document titled the "Gang Field Interview Sheet", the local police detailed their observations.
They said Mr Abrego Garcia was wearing a "Chicago Bulls hat and a hoodie with rolls of money covering the eyes, ears and mouth of the presidents on the separate denominations".
Officers claimed the clothing was "indicative of the Hispanic gang culture" and that "wearing the Chicago Bulls hat represents thay [sic] are a member in good standing with the MS-13".Officials have also sought to address some of the persistent concerns about AI systems.
One is that they sometimes invent information - a failing known as "hallucinating".Because the AI was only being asked to carry out a relatively limited task, officials said hallucination would not be a major problem.
Such AI tools, built using what are known as "large language models" have also displayed bias, as they adsorb the prejudices inherent in the human-generated data on which they are trained.But experts who worked with Consult had found it reduced bias overall, the government said, by removing opportunities for individual human analysts to "project their own preconceived ideas".