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March 2025 Venezuelan deportations

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Aerial view of a prison near a volcano in an isolated area
The Terrorism Confinement Center, where the 238 Venezuelans deported to El Salvador are detained
External videos
video icon Video of the arrival of 238 alleged Tren de Aragua members posted by Salvadoran president Nayib Bukele on Twitter

In March 2025, the United States deported 137 Venezuelans to an El Salvadoran prison under the Alien Enemies Act. The Alien Enemies Act of 1798 gives the President wartime authority[1] to summarily arrest and deport[2] citizens of a nation that's in a declared war with the U.S., or which perpetrates, attempts, or threatens an "invasion or predatory incursion." U.S. President Donald Trump invoked the Act on the basis that the Venezuelan criminal gang Tren de Aragua was invading the United States at the behest of the Venezuelan government.[3] He ordered members of Tren de Aragua removed with expediency that leaves no time for those deported to defend themselves from the government's claim that they are members of the gang.[4]

The 137 Venezuelans expelled under the Act, as well as 101 Venezuelans deported under regular immigration law,[2][5] were detained at the maximum security Terrorism Confinement Center (CECOT) for an open-ended period of time. They arrived in El Salvador after the judge in a class action lawsuit, J.G.G. v. Trump, filed by the ACLU and Democracy Forward to stop the deportations, had issued a temporary restraining order pausing deportations under the Act and ordered any such flights not to take off or, if taken off, to return.[6] The flights did not, setting up a confrontation between the Trump administration and the courts.

On March 24, James Boasberg, Chief Judge of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia ruled that the government cannot deport anyone under the Alien Enemies Act without a hearing.[7][8] On March 28, the Trump administration filed an emergency appeal with the U.S. Supreme Court, asking it to vacate Boasberg's order and to immediately allow the administration to resume deportations under the Alien Enemies Act while it considered the request to vacate.[9]

Background

[edit]

Alien Enemies Act

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The Alien Enemies Act is one of the four Alien and Sedition Acts. Trump's invocation of the act was only its fourth use in U.S. history, and the first peacetime use of an act meant only to be used in wartime.[10] It was previously used after Congressional declarations of war in the War of 1812, World War I and, infamously,[11] World War II, when it was the legal basis for the mass internment of Japanese Americans.[10]

Trump and deportations

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During his 2024 presidential campaign, Trump promised to deport foreign gang members in what would be called "Operation Aurora", named after Aurora, Colorado. Aurora and the surrounding Denver metropolitan area had seen the arrival of over 50,000 Venezuelan in the past 18 months during the Venezuelan refugee crisis, and local police attributed crimes such as kidnapping, shooting, and prostitution to members of the gang Tren de Aragua. Trump's campaign alleged that the gang had taken over Aurora and used it to justify its broad immigrations policies.[12]

Tren de Aragua

[edit]

After Trump's presidential inauguration, he signed an executive order designating Tren de Aragua as a foreign terrorist organization as part of his plan to target the gang using the Alien Enemies Act.[13] Salvadoran president Nayib Bukele offered to help the Trump administration imprison criminals at CECOT, whether they be U.S. citizens or foreign nationals.[14]

A United States Intelligence Community assessment from February 26, 2025, concluded with a moderate level of confidence that the Venezuelan government was not controlling Tren de Aragua, the gang was not acting on government orders and lacked the resources and organization to do so. The FBI dissented, maintaining the gang has a connection to President Nicolás Maduro's administration based on information the other agencies rejected.[15]

Due process

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The Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution states that "no person" shall "be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law." Due process requires upholding the rights and legal protections set in law. Under U.S. immigration law, this includes opportunities to see a judge and request asylum,[2] though CNN, citing immigration attorneys, noted that people in immigration court face a lower standard of due process in practice.[16]

When the President takes on wartime power, the situation changes. Those subject to his declaration lose protections of immigration and criminal law,[3][17] and are instead processed as alien enemies under America's wartime laws.[2] They're eligible to be summarily arrested, detained, and deported without going through normal immigration proceedings, and cannot claim asylum.[4][18] The Associated Press wrote Trump's invocation of the act "could allow him to deport any noncitizen he says is associated with the gang, without offering roof or even publicly identifying them."[18] The process does not allow for a hearing,[19] which NPR noted leaves no time to contest the government's claims that deportees are members of a criminal gang,[4] and The Hill described as sparking fears it would lead to widespread deportations without connection to the gang.[19]

Lee Gelernt, the ACLU's lead counsel on J.G.G. v. Trump, told NPR that "these individuals did not get a hearing to show they're not members of a gang,"[4] while CNN quoted Nayna Gupta, policy director of the American Immigration Council, as saying that "flimsy evidence paired with no meaningful opportunity to refute that evidence in any kind of proceeding before any kind of decision-maker” distinguished the case.[16] Lindsay Toczyklowsky, lawyer with the Immigrant Defenders Law Center nonprofit, said the administration hadn't done the work to understand who they were sending to El Salvador. She pointed to her client, who applied for asylum, came under suspicion for his tattoos, and was sent to CECOT without his lawyers having a chance to counter the claims at a court hearing.[20]

White House Border Czar Tom Homan, asked on ABC's “This Week" about whether deportees who denied being members of the gang got a chance to prove it before being sent to a Salvadoran prison and if "they have any due process at all,"[21] replied: “Due process? What was Laken Riley’s due process? What were all these young women that were killed and raped by members of TdA, what was their due process?”[22] The statement was described as an example of whataboutism, meant to evade the substance of the question. Laken Riley was a Georgia nursing student who was murdered by an illegal immigrant. Trump and conservative media routinely refer to her murderer as a member of Tren de Aragua. The police or prosecutors on her case have not.[23]

Timeline

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On Friday, March 14, 2025, Trump signed presidential proclamation 10903, invoking the Alien Enemies Act[24][25] and asserting that Tren de Aragua, a criminal organization from Venezuela, had invaded the United States.[26] The White House did not announce at the time that the proclamation has been signed. However, media were reporting that Trump was planning to invoke the Alien Enemies Act against Tren de Aragua,[27] so that afternoon the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) started working on a class action lawsuit to prevent anyone's deportation until the case was heard in court, and they contacted immigration lawyers to identify possible plaintiffs, finding five Venezuelan men with cases before the immigration court, all of whom had been transferred to a Texas detention facility.[28]

Very early on Saturday, March 15, the ACLU and Democracy Forward filed their class action suit in the District Court for the District of Columbia on behalf of the five men, using affidavits from their immigration attorneys because the men themselves could not be reached.[28] They were still unaware that Trump had already signed the proclamation.[29] The suit was assigned to judge James Boasberg.[30] That morning, noting the exigent circumstances, he approved a temporary restraining order for the five plaintiffs, and he ordered a 5 p.m. hearing to determine whether he would certify the class in the class action.[31] The government intended to starting deport men alleged to be Tren de Aragua members that same day and had started bringing Venezuelans to the airport that morning. All five of the plaintiffs were already at the airport, and four were aboard a plane, but were taken off the plane in light of Boasberg's order.[28]

Other men continued to be transported to the airport. In the mid-afternoon, detainees were taken from El Valle detention center in Raymondville, Texas, to buses.[30] Subsequently, the White House announced that Trump had invoked the Alien Enemies Act, posting a copy of the proclamation to its website.[32]

At 5 p.m., Boasberg began the court hearing to determine whether to certify the class and grant a temporary restraining order for the class.[31] Boasberg asked deputy assistant attorney general Drew Ensign if the Trump administration was planning to carry out deportations using the Alien Enemies Act in the next 48 hours. Ensign replied that he did not know and requested time to find out.[31] Boasberg gave Ensign around 40 minutes to find out, pausing the hearing at 5:22 p.m.[31] Meanwhile, at Harlingen, Texas, two planes with Venezuelan deportees took off, one at 5:26 p.m. and the other at 5:44 p.m.[24] Boasberg resumed the hearing around 5:55 p.m., with Ensign saying that he still had no specific information about the Trump administration's plans.[31]

At 7:36 p.m., ten minutes after Boasberg's written order was published, a third deportation flight departed from Harlingen.[24] The three flights carried 137 Venezuelans deported under the Act, 101 deported under regular immigration law, and 23 Salvadorans accused of membership in the MS-13 gang,[2][5]An Immigration and Customs Enforcement official later told the court that none of the deportees on this third flight were deported under the Alien Enemies Act.[24]

Later that evening, each of the three planes landed at Soto Cano air base in Comayagua, Honduras, and after a period of time, each left Honduras, landing in San Salvador, El Salvador, in the early hours of the morning of March 16.[24] Taken together, the three flights took over 260 migrants to El Salvador, where they were taken into custody at the Terrorism Confinement Center (CECOT).[31] President of El Salvador, Nayib Bukele, tweeted that 238 of the alleged gang members are associated with Tren de Aragua and 23 with MS-13.[33]

The following morning the President of El Salvador, Nayib Bukele, responded to the Judge Boasberg's temporary restraining order with "Oopsie…too late" and a crying-with-laughter emoji in a post on X.[34] Some Trump administration officials joined in on what Salon described as "mocking" the judge's order. Secretary of State Marco Rubio recirculated (reposted) Bukele's message,[35] as did White House communications director Steven Cheung, who added a clip of smiling actor Denzel Washington saying "Boom!"[36] Elon Musk replied to Bukele with another such emoji.[37]

On March 31, the government deported more Venezuelans to CECOT. State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce declined to comment when asked what authorization they were using to make these deportations.[38]

Non-disclosure of deportees' names

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The US has not provided a list of names, evidence of crimes, or evidence of affiliation to Tren de Aragua to families or the media, with White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt stating that she was "not going to reveal operational details about a counterterrorism operation."[39] This set off what the Associated Press described as a "scramble" as families tried to learn what had happened to loved ones who had been removed from ICE's online detainee locator.[40] Some were able to identify them through media released by El Salvador.[41] Families have not heard from their loved ones since their deportation and subsequent detention.[39]

The names of the 238 Venezuelans were published by CBS News on March 20 from an internal government document that it had obtained.[41]

Duration of imprisonment

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Bukele has said that the 238 men were transferred to CECOT for a one-year period that could be renewed.[42] and an internal memo from El Salvador's foreign ministry stated the country would house those it received from the US for one year, "pending the United State's decision on their long term disposition."[43]

The Associated Press reports that it's not clear when and how the deportees could ever be released, as they're not serving sentences. They haven't appeared before a judge in El Salvador and are no longer in ICE's online detainee locator.[44] El Salvador's prisons and CECOT in particular are deliberately harsh, and the country's Minister of Justice has previously said that those held at CECOT would never return to their communities.[17]

Conditions at CECOT

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El Salvador has cracked down on gang violence and some basic rights in recent years.[17] The Terrorism Confinement Center (Centro de Confinamiento del Terrorismo, CECOT), which the Associated Press and The Hill describe as "notorious,"[45][46] was built amidst the crackdown as part of the country's "tough on crime" policies.[10] Prisoners are held in large cement cells that the Associated Press reports can house 65 to 70 each, though in governmental "slickly produced videos" the cells lack enough bunks for everyone;[17] the BBC points out that with severely restricted access and journalists only allowed on occasional, carefully choreographed tours, the number of inmates per cell is not clear, with some rights groups putting it at 80, others saying it can go up to more than 150. Asked by the BBC about maximum capacity, CECOT's director responded "where you can fit 10 people, you can fit 20."[47] The cells are furnished with four-story bunks of bare metal without mattresses or sheets, two toilets, two sinks,[48] and two Bibles.[49] The cells are artificially lit 24 hours a day[49] and the temperature can reach 35 °C in the day.[48]

Prisoners are allowed to leave their cells for 30 minutes a day for group exercise in a corridor.[47][48] There are no visits, workshops, or prison educational programs, and prisoners are not allowed outside.[17] The food, which journalist Liam Bartlett stated is the same each day,[10] is served without utensils, to keep them from being fashioned into weapons.[48] Occasionally, prisoners who have gained a level of trust give motivational talks.[17] No external institutions or NGOs are allowed access.[48]

El Salvador's Minister of Justice has said those held at CECOT would never return to their communities,[17] and the BBC in 2024 cited Miguel Sarre, formerly of the United Nations Subcommittee for the Prevention of Torture, as warning that CECOT appeared to be used "to dispose of people without formally applying the death penalty," referring to the fact that no-one had so far been released from the jail. Cristosal [es], which the BBC described as El Salvador's primary human rights organization, has documented torture and more than 150 deaths in custody in the country during the State of Emergency. Amnesty International accused Salvadoran authorities of "a systematic policy of torture towards all those detained under the state of emergency on suspicion of being gang members," leading to deaths in custody, while other prisoners have died due to inhumane conditions and denial of medical care and medicine.[48] John Raphling of Human Rights Watch spoke of being "incredibly overcrowded," with "severe brutality, even amounting to torture under international human rights law definitions, and people being held out of communication with anyone on the outside.”[50]

[edit]

J.G.G. v Donald J. Trump

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J.G.G. v. TRUMP
CourtUnited States District Court for the District of Columbia
StartedMarch 15, 2025 (2025-03-15)
Docket nos.1:25-cv-00766
Court membership
Judge sittingJames Emanuel Boasberg

J.G.G. v. Donald J. Trump is a class action and Habeas corpus lawsuit by 5 Venezuelan men that were in immigration custody threatened with imminent removal under the expected Proclamation of U.S. President Donald J. Trump invoking the Alien Enemies Act.[51]

Neither the US nor Salvadoran governments offered any details or evidence to support their claims that those deported had been charged with crimes or had connections to any gangs.[10]

Axios reported one Trump administration official acknowledging that the Trump administration had carried out the deportations "after a discussion about how far the judge's ruling can go under the circumstances and over international waters and, on advice of counsel", while a second Trump administration official commented: "They were already outside of US airspace. We believe the order [by the judge] is not applicable".[52] Later, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt stated that Boasberg's order "had no lawful basis" and was given after the accused "had already been removed from U.S. territory", while further stating: "A single judge in a single city cannot direct the movements of an aircraft carrier".[52]

In a March 21 hearing, Judge Boasberg described this use of the Enemy Aliens Act as "incredibly troublesome and problematic",[5] adding that it appeared the administration anticipated the proclamation was problematic given that they had it "signed in the dark" of night.[53] In the court, ACLU lawyers argued that foreign nationals are entitled to due process under the U.S. Constitution.[5] The judge also expressed frustration with the government's lack of cooperation and stated "I will get to the bottom of whether they violated my order and who ordered this.”[54]

On March 24, Judge Boasberg denied the Trump administration's request to lift the blocking the Trump administration from deporting Venezuelan migrants with the invocation of the wartime powers. He ruled that those who have been deported under the Alien Enemies Act must be allowed to challenge their removal.[7][8]

On March 28, the Trump administration filed an emergency appeal with the U.S. Supreme Court, asking it to vacate Boasberg's order and to immediately allow the administration to resume deportations under the Alien Enemies Act while it considered the request to vacate.[9]

Alleged torture at CECOT

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Human rights organizations have claimed that CECOT inmates suffer various kinds of abuse, sometimes including torture.[17] Princeton University law professor Rebecca Ingber and Scott Roehm, director of global policy and advocacy at the Center for Victims of Torture, write that because of the potential for torture, it may have been illegal to send the deportees there under US law.[55] Denying the government's motion to vacate his restraining order on March 23, Judge Boasberg cited the UN Convention against Torture (CAT) and US law implementing it as an "obstacle" to deporting migrants for incarceration at CECOT due to the "likelihood of potential torture" there.[56][57]

On March 28, US District Judge Brian E. Murphy ordered that no migrants be deported to a nation other than that covered in immigration proceedings without a "meaningful opportunity" to make a claim under CAT.[58][59] Despite this order, on March 31 the US sent 17 migrants it alleged without providing evidence to be members of Tren de Aragua and MS-13 on US military planes to El Salvador to be confined at CECOT.[60][61]

Criminalization of asylum

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Human rights organizations have raised concerns about the misuse of visual or cultural stereotypes as justification for deportations, often carried out before scheduled court hearings or pending legal decisions. This practice has been criticized for undermining the principles of international law and fundamental rights to legal defense and asylum. One of the most notable of the purported cases is that of Jerce Reyes Barrios,[62] a 36-year-old Venezuelan footballer who was deported to El Salvador by the Trump administration due to his alleged association with the Tren de Aragua. Reyes Barrios had legally entered the United States in 2024 and applied for asylum after allegedly fleeing torture in Venezuela.[63][64] He was scheduled to appear in court in April but was removed from the country without prior notice.[63]

Alien Enemy Validation Guide

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In a court filing the ACLU shared what they believe to be a guide ICE uses in determining who is a member of Tren de Aragua. It's based on a point system where each item is worth 2-10 points. Anyone with 8 point is to be labeled as a gang member, but individuals with as few as 6 points can also be labeled as a gang member with a supervisor's authorization.[65][66]

In one example given by ABC, "Communicating electronically with a known TdA member is worth six points" which seems it could be enough on it's own to label someone as a gang member. [67]

Use of ordinary tattoos as evidence

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The United States government has labeled migrants sent to Guantánamo as members of the Tren de Aragua, primarily based on tattoos believed to be associated with the gang, such as crowns, flowers, phrases like "real hasta la muerte," a crown on a soccer ball, an eyeball that "looked cool" and the silhouette of Michael Jordan.[68] However, defense attorneys argue that the arrests have been made without concrete evidence, and former Venezuelan officials deny that the gang used any specific tattoo symbolism.[68][69]

Andrés Antillano, a criminology professor who has studied the Tren de Aragua in his research at the Central University of Venezuela, said that although tattoos are common in Central American gangs, that was not the case for Tren de Aragua, and that trying to identify members using tattoos was "absurd" and "naïve". Ronna Rísquez, a Venezuelan journalist who has written a book on Tren de Aragua said "Tren de Aragua does not use any tattoos as a form of gang identification; no Venezuelan gang does."[28]

Linette Tobin, lawyer for the detained Jerce Reyes Barrios stated that there is no evidence linking him to the criminal organization, that the Department of Homeland Security's (DHS) only basis for such a link consisted of a tattoo resembling Real Madrid symbols and a photograph in which he made a sign language gesture, and that his whereabouts have remained unknown since his deportation on March 15.[63][68]

According to a report by Mother Jones, one detainee had been asked by an ICE agent if he knew why he was there, and when he said he did not, the agent replied that he was there because of his tattoos - and that ICE was finding and questioning anyone who has tattoos.[70]

Deportees

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According to Time Magazine, on intake the prisoners were physically bludgeoned and had their heads forcibly shaved. One of them sobbed and protested that "I'm not a gang member. I'm gay; I'm a barber".[71] A propaganda video shared by Bukele on X shows the men being dragged and having their heads shaved.[72] Juanita Goebertus Estrada, the director of the Americas division of Human Rights Watch described such videos as designed to "humiliate and try to dehumanize the people who are detained there".[73]

Eight women and one Nicaraguan man were on the deportation flights. They were not accepted by the El Salvadoran government and returned to the US.[74] According to some of these women, all of the detainees were arm and leg shackled for the entire flight including a several hour stopover to refuel. They also allege detainees were threatened by government officials who were pushing them to sign documents stating they were gang members.[74]

Some of the deported signed voluntary deportation agreements thinking they would be deported to Venezuela and could in theory later reapply to return to the US, but were instead sent to CECOT.[39][75]

Lawyers for the accused claim that their clients are not gang members and were deported for everyday tattoos including a crown over a soccer ball and flowers.[76][77] In a court filing, the administration stated that "many" of those who had been deported do not have criminal records in the US.[78]

Jerce Reyes Barrios

[edit]

Jerce Reyes Barrios was a 35-year-old Venezuelan and former professional soccer player. He was among those deported to the maximum security prison in El Salvador. Barrios came to the US legally seeking asylum after he was arrested and tortured by the Maduro regime.[79]

According to a court filing by Barrios' lawyer, ICE evaluated Barrios as a gang member based on his Real Madrid tattoo and a hand gesture from social media.[80]

"E.M."

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A man Miami Herald identified as "E.M." and his girlfriend fled persecution to Colombia. They were granted refugee status in the U.S., but upon arrival in Houston on January 8 he was detained on suspicion of being a Tren de Aragua member over his tattoos of a crown, a soccer ball and a palm tree, while she opted to be deported to Colombia. He was held until March 15, when he was deported to El Salvador and imprisoned in CECOT.[81] E.M.'s family were not informed he had been deported. His alien registration number disappeared from the online immigration system, and they had no idea where he was until finding his name on a list published by CBS News.[81]

Andres Guillermo Morales

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Morales is a dual Colombian-Venezuelan citizen. Reuters independently confirmed that he had a legal work permit in the United States as a part of his asylum application, and he worked for an air-conditioning and cement company. Reuters also confirmed that he has no criminal record in Colombia. His wife stated that none of his tattoos were connected to gang activity but instead depicted his parents' names, a clock, a star with music notes, and a Bible verse.

Morales signed a deportation order for Colombia and was told by Colombia's consulate in San Francisco that he would be deported to Bogota, Colombia. However, he was instead deported to the maximum security prison in El Salvador.[82]

Javier Garcia Casique

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Casique is a barber who, according to his mother, arrived in the US in December 2023 seeking asylum. She recognized him from photos of the people being deported, denied he's a gang member, and said his tattoos said "peace" and the names of family members.[83]

Andrys

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Andrys is a 31-year-old make up artist. According to his laywer, Andrys, who is gay, arrived in the U.S. seeking asylum, and his tattoos were what you "would see on anybody at a coffee shop". His family believed he was being deported to Venezuela but he was instead sent to CECOT.[84][85][86]

Jose Franco Caraballo Tiapa

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Caraballo is a barber who came to the US illegally[40] with his wife by not crossing the border at a prescribed point of entry.[87] Claiming asylum, they were released and ordered to check in regularly with ICE during the process of seeking asylum in the United States. Caraballo's first court appearance was scheduled to be before an immigration judge on March 19;[88] however, he was detained at a routine check-in on February 3. According to his lawyer, an ICE agent had noticed a tattoo of a clock on his arm, showing the time of his daughter's birth. WLRN writes that this is a popular style of tattoo in Venezuela, but one US authorities identify as a favorite of Tren de Aragua. WLRN goes on to note that according to court records it had reviewed, ICE agents, apparently solely on that basis, accused Caraballo of being a TdA member.[87] He was deported to the maximum security prison in El Salvador on March 15. His wife[88] and lawyer[87] were not informed why his name had vanished from ICE's online detainee locator. Caraballo does not have a criminal record in Venezuela.[88] According to his wife, while there he had taken part in marches against the Venezuelan government that were led by Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado, and in 2019 was held in two days and beaten while in custody.[87]

Jhon Chacin

[edit]

Jhon Chacin is a tattoo artist. His application for asylum was denied and he signed an agreement to be deported back to Venezuela. His flight home was postponed due to bad weather. Then his brother recognized him in a video from the El Salvador deportations.[89]

International relations

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El Salvador

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The United States agree to pay El Salvador US$6 million to imprison 300 alleged members of the Venezuelan Tren de Aragua gang. El Salvador's Foreign Ministry confirmed that there was a 1 year agreement with the possibility to extend it long-term.[90]

As part of the deportation flights the US dropped charges against a key alleged MS-13 leader. According to court documents and former US officials he may have information which could implicate top Salvadoran government officials. A former federal agent who spent years working on gang cases including MS-13 described it as a "historical loss" and said “He was a potential high-level source. And he doesn’t get to face US justice.”[91]

According to documents obtained by the AP, El Salvador would receive $20,000 per detainee, totaling around $6 million paid by the United States, with the possibility of additional payments of up to $15 million. Bukele stated that the payments would contribute to the self-sufficiency of the prison system, whose annual cost reaches $200 million, and highlighted prison labor as part of the "Zero Idleness" program.[92] The agreement was signed between Bukele and U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio during an official visit to Central America, being described as "unprecedented" and even involving the reception of American citizens. Experts point out that the agreement strengthens political ties between Bukele and Donald Trump, who publicly praised him, and provides diplomatic benefits to the Salvadoran government, such as the U.S. silence in the face of human rights violation accusations under El Salvador’s prolonged state of emergency. Organizations like Human Rights Watch report that the deportees are being sent to a prison system accused of torture, deaths in custody, and arbitrary detentions, portraying the Cecot as a "Guantánamo of Central America."[92]

Venezuela

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The Venezuelan government, led by Nicolás Maduro, called the transfers a "kidnapping" and denied any links between the deportees and the gang.[93][69] Jorge Rodríguez, Maduro's chief negotiator with the U.S., stated that, "Migrating is not a crime and we will not rest until we achieve the return of all those who require it and until we rescue our brothers kidnapped in El Salvador."[94] Venezuelan Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello stated on a podcast that "not a single [deportee] appears on the organizational chart of the now-extinct Tren de Aragua organization".[95]

On March 24, 2025, Venezuelan government lawyers filed habeas corpus petitions in El Salvador's Supreme Court for the detainees.[96]

Reactions

[edit]

Because the Trump administration didn't release a list of the names of the men who had been taken to CECOT, family members often discovered this after recognizing their Venezuelan son, or brother, or husband in videos that were released by Bukele; other times, they assume it because they cannot reach him and he no longer appears in the immigration database.[28] Parents have disputed gang affiliation claims made by the US and Salvadoran governments, asserting that their children did not have a criminal record, with one parent even providing an official Venezuelan document stating that her son has no criminal record.

Some Japanese Americans have expressed concern about the Alien Enemies Act being used again as, during internment in the Second World War, many innocent people were detained, and there was no oversight.[97]

The Brennan Center for Justice said in a statement that "The Alien Enemies Act may be used only during declared wars or armed attacks on the United States by foreign governments" and "The president has falsely proclaimed an invasion".[98]

Joe Rogan said "it's horrific" that innocent people can be wrongly labeled as gang members and sent of a maximum security prison in another country. [99][100]

References

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  1. ^ Oliphant, James; Gardner, Timothy; McKay, Rich (March 16, 2025). "Judge temporarily blocks Trump's use of wartime powers to target Venezuelan gang members". Reuters. Retrieved March 29, 2025.
  2. ^ a b c d e Montoya-Galvez, Camilo (March 16, 2025). "Trump invokes 1798 Alien Enemies Act, orders deportation of suspected Venezuelan gang members". CBS News. Retrieved March 28, 2025.
  3. ^ a b Riccardi, Nicholas; Weissert, Will (March 15, 2025). "Trump invokes 18th century law, declaring 'invasion' by gangs to speed mass deportations". PBS. Retrieved March 28, 2025.
  4. ^ a b c d Garrett, Luke (March 16, 2025). "U.S. deports hundreds of Venezuelans to El Salvador, despite court order". NPR. Retrieved March 30, 2025. The Alien Enemies Act allows an expedited removal process, which means those subject to the president's declaration would not go through the normal immigration proceedings in court, or be able to claim asylum. The proclamation also leaves no time to contest the government's claims that people are members of a criminal gang.
  5. ^ a b c d Bustillo, Ximena; Garsd, Jasmine (March 21, 2025). "Judge Boasberg voices skepticism over use of Alien Enemies Act deportations". NPR. Retrieved March 21, 2025.
  6. ^ Charalambous, Peter; Romero, Laura; Brown, Ely; Hill, James; Faulders, Katherine (March 17, 2025). "Timeline: Trump's race against courts to deport alleged gang members under Alien Enemies Act". ABC News. Retrieved March 28, 2025.
  7. ^ a b "'Nazis got better treatment,' judge says of Trump administration's Alien Enemies Act deportations". ABC News.
  8. ^ a b "Judge: US treated Nazis better than Venezuelan migrants who were deported". BBC News.
  9. ^ a b Sherman, Mark (March 28, 2025). "Trump asks Supreme Court for permission to resume deporting Venezuelan migrants under wartime law". AP News. Retrieved March 28, 2025.
  10. ^ a b c d e Helmore, Edward; Phillips, Tom (March 16, 2025). "US deports 250 alleged gang members to El Salvador despite court ruling to halt flights". The Guardian. Retrieved March 29, 2025.
  11. ^ Shaheen, Perla (March 25, 2025). "Alien Enemies Act brings back painful experiences for San Diego Japanese Americans". KGTV. Retrieved March 29, 2025.
  12. ^ Noriega, David; Ford, Sarah (March 18, 2025). "The truth about Tren de Aragua, the gang at the center of Trump's immigration crackdown". NBC News. Retrieved March 27, 2025.
  13. ^ Lotz, Avery (January 21, 2025). "Executive order list: What executive orders did President Trump sign and what to know". Axios. Retrieved January 22, 2025.
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