Venezuelan migrants accused by the U.S. of belonging to the Tren de Aragua prison gang are seen being transferred from the Terrorism Confinement Middle (Cecot) in El Salvador earlier than being repatriated to Caracas on July 18, 2025 in La Paz, El Salvador.
El Salvador Press Presidency Workplace/Anadolu by way of Getty Photographs
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El Salvador Press Presidency Workplace/Anadolu by way of Getty Photographs
Carlos Daniel Terán, 19, nonetheless remembers the phrases a jail warden instructed him when he entered El Salvador’s mega-prison, CECOT.
“He told us we were never going to leave this place,” Terán recalled.
It was March of this yr. Terán had simply been transferred from an immigration detention middle in Texas to the infamous Centro de Confinamiento del Terrorismo — often known as CECOT — a maximum-security jail constructed to deal with accused Salvadoran gang members. El Salvador’s personal justice minister as soon as stated the one method out of the jail was “inside a coffin.”

Carlos Daniel Terán, 19, poses at his aunt’s residence in Caracas, Venezuela after being launched from a most safety jail in El Salvador.
Through the Terán household
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Through the Terán household
Terán was amongst a whole lot of Venezuelans despatched to El Salvador by the Trump administration, many underneath the 1798 Alien Enemies Act, a rarely-used wartime energy. They had been accused — with out proof — of being members of Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua. For almost 4 months, the U.S. authorities withheld the identities of the lads it deported and barred them from contacting their households or attorneys.
Then simply over every week in the past, Terán was all of a sudden a free man — launched alongside greater than 250 different Venezuelan detainees as a part of a prisoner alternate between the U.S. and Venezuela.
“I thought this was going to be the last experience of my life,” Terán instructed NPR from Caracas. “I thought I was going to die there.”
“Hell on earth”
Since their launch, NPR has spoken with Terán and two different former detainees about their time at CECOT. They described being subjected to violence — and, in some instances, sexual abuse — by jail guards, denied ample meals, and compelled to endure inhumane circumstances.
NPR has adopted Terán’s case since he was first picked up by ICE from his residence in Texas in February. He had entered the U.S. legally via the Biden-era CBP One program. He has no prison file within the U.S., and denies any gang affiliation. His solely previous offenses stem from prices in Chile as a minor – of gun possession and possessing or transporting small portions of medication.
Like Terán, the opposite Venezuelan’s despatched to El Salvador from the U.S., have denied being affiliated to the Tren de Aragua.
Though he describes himself as a person of religion, Terán stated his days at CECOT had been actually laborious for him.
“I felt really sad — I spent my birthday there and it was hard to not get a call from my family,” he stated.
Juan and Marian, father and stepmother of Carlos Daniel Terán, who was taken into custody by legislation enforcement and immigration officers every week after President Trump took workplace, stand for a portrait in Cedar Park, Texas, on Jan. 29, 2025.
Tamir Kalifa for NPR/Tamir Kalifa
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Tamir Kalifa for NPR/Tamir Kalifa
Inside CECOT, he and the opposite prisoners had been hardly ever set free of their cells. The meals consisted principally of beans, tortilla and rice. The bathrooms of their cells had been typically clogged. And there was no air-con regardless of the recent and humid climate.
Prisoners may solely bathe in water that was pumped into two cement tanks constructed into their cells. However solely as soon as a day, at a time set by the jail guards. There have been no partitions to separate the showering areas, or the bathroom, from the remainder of the cell.
The detainees slept on metallic planks organized like bunk beds — no mattresses, blankets or pillows. Terán says he slept in a seating place the entire 4 months.
However Terán and the others say the worst half was how guards used violence towards them.
Andry Hernandez, one of many detainees who was additionally launched simply over every week in the past, instructed NPR that guards routinely beat prisoners with batons within the hallway — or dragged them to a small, windowless cell often known as “La Isla,” or “The Island,” the place the abuse was much more brutal.
In accordance with Hernandez, 32, the prisoners could be dragged out of their cells for complaining about their circumstances, taking a shower outdoors designated hours, and even for making an excessive amount of noise.
Hernandez, who’s brazenly homosexual, stated he was as soon as taken by the guards to “La Isla” after guards seen him bathing with a bucket outdoors designated hours.
He stated that he was overwhelmed by three guards carrying masks. And compelled to carry out oral intercourse on one of many guards. After a few hours, he was dragged again to his cell.
“CECOT was hell on Earth,” Hernandez instructed NPR from Capacho, Venezuela, the place he is now again together with his household.
Andry Hernandez greets his greatest buddy Reina Cardenas, after police drop him off at residence on July 23, 2025.
Manuel Rueda
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Manuel Rueda
“Condemned for life.”
Opened in January 2023 as a part of President Nayib Bukele’s anti-gang crackdown, CECOT has remained largely off-limits to outdoors scrutiny—its picture tightly managed via polished authorities movies and staged picture ops with visiting officers, together with U.S. Homeland Safety Secretary Kristi Noem. The Venezuelans launched final week are among the many first former inmates to talk publicly about what they endured inside.
In accordance with the lads NPR spoke to there have been no books at CECOT aside from Bibles, and prisoners had been solely allowed to go away their cells sometimes to play soccer within the hallway, or take part in prayer classes led by an evangelical pastor who was additionally an inmate. Hernandez stated that prisoners entertained themselves by chatting,or enjoying dominoes or parchis with items that they had comprised of the tortillas they had been served for lunch.
“The guards wanted us to be in total silence,” Hernandez stated. “But for us that was very difficult, because by nature we Venezuelans are a happy people, who are accustomed to joking around, and screaming, even in dire conditions.”
Neighbors have a good time Andry Hernadnez’s return to his hometown of Capach on July 23, 2025.
Manuel Rueda
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Manuel Rueda
Andres Morales, a detainee from the city of San Antonio, in western Venezuela, instructed NPR that the beatings started as quickly because the Venezuelans arrived on the jail. Guards instructed him he was “condemned for life.”
Morales stated that in the course of the first month in CECOT, the Venezuelan prisoners held a starvation strike that lasted for 3 days, the place they demanded, unsuccessfully, to have contact with their kin, and extra details about their instances. He says that some days later, the prisoners turned extra determined and staged a “blood strike.”
Each Terán and Hernandez corroborated Morales’ account.
“Some of the prisoners removed clamps from the cell’s piping and used them to cut themselves,” Hernandez instructed NPR. He stated he didn’t take part within the protest, however described how different detainees smeared blood on the partitions and wrote the letters “SOS.”
“We were treated like bargaining chips”
The Trump administration paid El Salvador $6 million to deal with the Venezuelan males, after accusing them of being members of the Tren de Aragua gang.
The Division of Homeland Safety didn’t reply to the particular allegations made by the lads. As an alternative, DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin repeated the accusation that they had been members of the Tren de Aragua gang, however didn’t present any proof to again these claims.
“Once again, the media is falling all over themselves to defend criminal illegal gang members,” McLaughlin stated in an e mail to NPR. “We hear far too much about gang members and criminals’ false sob stories and not enough about their victims.”
A spokesperson for the federal government of El Salvador didn’t reply to NPR’s request for touch upon any of the allegations.
Noah Bullock, the manager director of Cristosal, a Salvadoran human rights group stated that the beatings and a number of the different circumstances described by the Venezuelan prisoners qualify as torture, and that by taking the Venezuelan prisoners to El Salvador, with out notifying their attorneys, or their households, U.S. and Salvadorean authorities probably dedicated an act of compelled disappearance.

Venezuelan migrants accused by the U.S. of belonging to the Tren de Aragua prison gang are seen being transferred from the Terrorism Confinement Middle (Cecot) in El Salvador earlier than being repatriated to Caracas on July 18, 2025 in La Paz, El Salvador.
El Salvador Press Presidency Workplace/Anadolu by way of Getty Photographs
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El Salvador Press Presidency Workplace/Anadolu by way of Getty Photographs
“These are people who never had a trial, who were never convicted of anything, and were sent to a third country to be put into a maximum security prison indefinitely.” Bullock stated. “Just on those grounds, you have clear due process violations.”
Cristosal carried out background checks on 160 of the 252 Venezuelans despatched to El Salvador and in addition interviewed their households. The group stated that much less than 10% had prison data.
Bullock stated round 400 prisoners have died in Salvadoran custody since March 2022, when President Nayib Bukele declared a state of exception that suspended key due course of rights. Below the measure, authorities can maintain suspects for months with out disclosing their whereabouts or permitting contact with attorneys or household.
“We were treated like bargaining chips,” Hernandez stated. “I don’t understand why Bukele had to offer his prisons, to kidnap migrants that had never set foot in his country.”