FCC chairman focuses on Comcast about covering Kilmar Abrego Garcia

FCC chairman Brendan Carr focused on CNN and MSNBC and considered their reporting on the deportation of Kilmar Abrego Garcia ‘News deformation’.
On Wednesday, Carr at X went to share his thoughts about how the Comcast sales points covered the Garcia situation and responded to a post from White House -director of communication assistant Steven Cheung.
“Comcast sales points spent days misleading the American audience -the establishment that Abrego Garcia was only a loyal American citizen, only an ordinary ‘Maryland man’,” “” Carr wrote. “When the truth comes out, they ignore it. Comcast knows that the federal law requires recognized activities to serve the public interest. News worm does not reduce it.”
He continued: “Abrego Garcia came illegally to America from El Salvador, was validated as a member of the violent MS13 gang – a transnational criminal organization – and the band was denied by an immigration court because of not demonstrating that he would not be a danger to others. Why ignores these facts of clear?”
Comcast did not respond immediately VarietyThe request for comments.
Carr’s Use of the term “news worming” increases the ghost of him that an FCC complaint against Comcast or MSNBC pursues that grounds, as he is currently in the fight with CBS during his “60 minutes” interview of Kamala Harris last October. However, the FCC has less authority to monitor the content of cable channels such as MSNBC than the TV stations broadcast that are owned by CBS.
Garcia has been the subject of a media Firestorm since he was suddenly deported from the United States to an El Salvadorian prison in March because of an ‘administrative error’, the Ministry of Justice said.