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Households of Venezuelans Despatched to CECOT Open Up About Their Ordeal — ProPublica


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ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of energy. Signal as much as obtain our largest tales as quickly as they’re revealed. This text is co-published with The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan native newsroom that informs and engages with Texans, and Alianza Rebelde Investiga and Cazadores de Faux Information.

The Trump administration’s transfer 4 months in the past to ship greater than 230 Venezuelan migrants to a maximum-security jail in El Salvador often known as CECOT took a staggering toll, not solely on the lads themselves but additionally on their households. The lads have been launched to Venezuela on July 18 as a part of a prisoner swap with out a lot clarification, and so they and their kinfolk have begun sharing the small print of their ordeal.

Juan José Ramos Ramos describes the bodily torture he says he endured throughout his incarceration at CECOT as his mom, Lina Ramos, explains the emotional agony of not realizing whether or not she’d ever see her son once more. Andry Blanco Bonilla and his mom, Carmen Bonilla, nonetheless wrestle to make sense of how they might have been caught up in one thing like this when Blanco didn’t have a prison report and, actually, had a deportation order to be despatched again to his house nation. Wilmer Vega Sandia, who had migrated to the USA to search out work that might assist him pay for his mom’s most cancers remedy, says he prayed each day of his incarceration that he’d make it house in time to carry her in his arms.

With out offering proof, the U.S. authorities branded all of them Tren de Aragua gang members, the “worst of the worst,” “sick animals” and “monsters.” Our reporting, a first-of-its-kind, case-by-case examination, exhibits how the federal government knew a majority of them had not been convicted of a criminal offense within the U.S. — and only some had severe convictions equivalent to assault and gun possession. We discovered a dozen or so had prison data overseas and included these in our complete database, too.

Almost half, 118 of the greater than 230 males, together with Ramos, got here to the U.S. legally and have been deported in the course of their immigration instances. He entered the U.S. with a CBP One appointment, a program the Biden administration used to attempt to deliver order to the hovering numbers of migrants making an attempt to enter the nation.

A minimum of 166 of the greater than 230 males had tattoos, together with Blanco, Ramos and Vega. Our investigation discovered that the federal government relied closely on tattoos to tie the lads to the Venezuelan gang, regardless that Tren de Aragua consultants say tattoos will not be dependable indicators of gang affiliation.

A handful of the lads, together with Vega, had been granted voluntary departures by an immigration decide, which suggests that they had agreed to pay their means house to Venezuela. As a substitute, they have been deported to El Salvador.

Watch the video right here.

Melissa Sanchez, Perla Trevizo, Mica Rosenberg and Gabriel Sandoval of ProPublica; Ronna Rísquez of Alianza Rebelde Investiga; and Adrián González of Cazadores de Faux Information contributed reporting. Mauricio Rodríguez Pons and Almudena Toral of ProPublica contributed manufacturing.