The Prague Post - Families say tattoos landed Venezuelan migrants in Salvadoran mega-jail

EUR -
AED 4.313974
AFN 80.547575
ALL 97.43497
AMD 449.730626
ANG 2.102304
AOA 1077.171309
ARS 1492.791928
AUD 1.764032
AWG 2.116753
AZN 1.997541
BAM 1.955498
BBD 2.367735
BDT 143.357886
BGN 1.958425
BHD 0.442032
BIF 3495.360819
BMD 1.174669
BND 1.502568
BOB 8.10275
BRL 6.532918
BSD 1.172619
BTN 101.493344
BWP 15.744571
BYN 3.837608
BYR 23023.508484
BZD 2.355537
CAD 1.60865
CDF 3393.618188
CHF 0.926898
CLF 0.028411
CLP 1114.548074
CNY 8.403552
CNH 8.419421
COP 4775.56334
CRC 592.408617
CUC 1.174669
CUP 31.128723
CVE 110.247994
CZK 24.570488
DJF 208.817789
DKK 7.463499
DOP 71.149025
DZD 152.157529
EGP 57.684102
ERN 17.620032
ETB 163.190927
FJD 2.634488
FKP 0.873886
GBP 0.867394
GEL 3.183454
GGP 0.873886
GHS 12.25411
GIP 0.873886
GMD 84.575738
GNF 10176.430224
GTQ 9.000612
GYD 245.342154
HKD 9.220684
HNL 30.706263
HRK 7.537609
HTG 153.886262
HUF 396.849551
IDR 19217.346638
ILS 3.939604
IMP 0.873886
INR 101.616249
IQD 1536.163038
IRR 49468.241835
ISK 142.276027
JEP 0.873886
JMD 187.051146
JOD 0.832875
JPY 173.446916
KES 151.506629
KGS 102.547076
KHR 4697.275417
KMF 491.578229
KPW 1057.20192
KRW 1624.960429
KWD 0.358662
KYD 0.977249
KZT 639.00143
LAK 25279.100545
LBP 105069.992316
LKR 353.815422
LRD 235.113732
LSL 20.81239
LTL 3.468492
LVL 0.710545
LYD 6.330024
MAD 10.545173
MDL 19.723957
MGA 5179.201077
MKD 61.550505
MMK 2466.138379
MNT 4214.431849
MOP 9.481137
MRU 46.800781
MUR 53.341668
MVR 18.087317
MWK 2033.386338
MXN 21.791575
MYR 4.958862
MZN 75.131774
NAD 20.81239
NGN 1799.510455
NIO 43.153343
NOK 11.939521
NPR 162.388951
NZD 1.952023
OMR 0.45182
PAB 1.172619
PEN 4.153359
PGK 4.86025
PHP 67.131949
PKR 332.30154
PLN 4.249145
PYG 8783.645069
QAR 4.274541
RON 5.067644
RSD 117.131932
RUB 93.035649
RWF 1695.03853
SAR 4.407248
SBD 9.732243
SCR 16.618437
SDG 705.386032
SEK 11.18223
SGD 1.503814
SHP 0.923105
SLE 26.958871
SLL 24632.222042
SOS 670.196618
SRD 43.06747
STD 24313.272517
STN 24.496221
SVC 10.260417
SYP 15272.795461
SZL 20.804791
THB 38.023791
TJS 11.198873
TMT 4.123087
TND 3.423472
TOP 2.751192
TRY 47.660231
TTD 7.97377
TWD 34.632522
TZS 3004.93647
UAH 49.031737
UGX 4204.351453
USD 1.174669
UYU 46.972754
UZS 14837.711193
VES 141.281409
VND 30711.715781
VUV 139.313268
WST 3.217404
XAF 655.85583
XAG 0.030777
XAU 0.000352
XCD 3.174601
XCG 2.113374
XDR 0.815674
XOF 655.85583
XPF 119.331742
YER 283.035904
ZAR 20.886665
ZMK 10573.453177
ZMW 27.351781
ZWL 378.242874
  • RBGPF

    -1.1200

    73.88

    -1.52%

  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    22.89

    +0.17%

  • CMSC

    0.0550

    22.485

    +0.24%

  • BCC

    1.7100

    88.14

    +1.94%

  • SCS

    0.0700

    10.58

    +0.66%

  • RELX

    -0.9800

    52.73

    -1.86%

  • NGG

    -0.0800

    72.15

    -0.11%

  • BCE

    -0.2300

    24.2

    -0.95%

  • RIO

    -0.7300

    63.1

    -1.16%

  • GSK

    -0.2600

    37.97

    -0.68%

  • JRI

    -0.0600

    13.09

    -0.46%

  • AZN

    -1.0200

    72.66

    -1.4%

  • VOD

    -0.0900

    11.43

    -0.79%

  • BP

    0.0700

    32.2

    +0.22%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0400

    13.2

    -0.3%

  • BTI

    -0.3700

    52.25

    -0.71%

Families say tattoos landed Venezuelan migrants in Salvadoran mega-jail
Families say tattoos landed Venezuelan migrants in Salvadoran mega-jail / Photo: Handout - EL SALVADOR'S PRESIDENCY PRESS OFFICE/AFP/File

Families say tattoos landed Venezuelan migrants in Salvadoran mega-jail

Lawyers and relatives of Venezuelans flown from the United States to a notorious jail in El Salvador believe the men were wrongly labelled gang members and terrorists because of their tattoos.

Text size:

Jhon Chacin, a professional tattoo artist, has images of "a flower, a watch, an owl, skulls" and family members' names etched onto his skin.

Last October, the 35-year-old was arrested at the Mexican border for entering the United States illegally.

Then last weekend, after not hearing from him for several days, shocked family members spotted him in a video of shaved and chained prisoners at a maximum security prison in El Salvador.

He was one of 238 men declared as a member of Venezuela's Tren de Aragua -- a terrorist group under US law -- and deported by US President Donald Trump.

"He doesn't have a criminal record, he'd never been arrested," Chacin's sister Yuliana, who lives in Texas, told AFP.

She is convinced her brother was designated a gang member because of his body art.

At the US detention center, before being deported, "ICE (immigration) agents told him he belonged to a criminal gang because he had a lot of tattoos."

In the western Venezuelan city of Maracaibo, family members of several other deportees denied their loved ones were criminals.

Twenty-three-year-old Edwuar Hernandez Herrera, known to family and friends as Edward, left Venezuela in 2023.

He made a fraught journey across the jungle-filled Darien Gap before reaching the United States, where he was detained.

He has four tattoos -- his mother and daughter's names, an owl on his forearm and ears of corn on his chest, according to his mother Yarelis Herrera.

"These tattoos do not make him a criminal," she told AFP.

Herrera's friend Ringo Rincon, 39, has nine tattoos, including a watch showing the times his son and daughters were born, said his wife Roslyany Camano.

- Due process -

US authorities have provided little public evidence to support claims that all the deportees were members of Tren de Aragua (TdA).

In a court filing, a senior Immigration and Customs Enforcement official admitted "many" of the expelled men had no criminal records, because "they have only been in the United States for a short period of time."

But Department of Homeland Security spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin cited tattoos as evidence against 36-year-old professional soccer player Jerce Reyes Barrios.

"He has tattoos that are consistent with those indicating TdA gang membership. His own social media indicates he is a member of the vicious TdA gang," McLaughlin wrote on X.

She insisted US intelligence assessments "go beyond a single tattoo."

Reyes Barrios's lawyer, Linette Tobin, believes he was accused of gang membership for his tattoo of a crown atop a soccer ball -- a variant on the logo of Real Madrid, his favorite team.

In a letter posted on social media, Tobin said her client had sought asylum in the United States after being tortured for taking part in anti-government demonstrations in Venezuela.

- 'Strong vetting process' -

In September 2024, Texas authorities published a report listing tattoos it said were characteristic of Tren de Aragua membership, including crowns, stars and weapons.

Yet Ronna Risquez, author of a book about Tren de Aragua, said tattoos are not known to be a signifier of gang allegiance in Venezuela -- unlike heavily tattooed members of El Salvador's Mara Salvatrucha.

Trump, who has previously linked tattoos with gang violence, on Friday insisted the men were a "bad group."

"I was told that they went through a very strong vetting process, and that that will also be continuing in El Salvador," he said.

But if anyone was misidentified "we would certainly want to find out" Trump added. "We don't want to make that kind of mistake."

Venezuelan Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello said Thursday the government had hired a law firm in El Salvador to try and secure the migrants' release.

Some eight million Venezuelans are estimated to have fled the country's economic meltdown and increasingly authoritarian rule in the past decade.

An estimated 770,000 Venezuelans live in the United States -- many under a protected status granted to citizens of dangerous countries, which Trump recently revoked.

Z.Pavlik--TPP