
How a Venezuelan migrant kept faith alive in Salvadoran prison ‘hell'
ImmigrationFacebookTweetLink
Follow
They were the worst 125 days of his life: locked up in a foreign prison, allegedly subjected to torture, never knowing when or even if he would ever get out.
Jerce Reyes said he, along with 251 other Venezuelan migrants, felt like the 'living dead' inside El Salvador's Center for Terrorism Confinement. They had been deported there from the US after being accused of gang involvement – a claim that Reyes and many others deny.
Reyes described his four-month detention in Cecot as agonizing, saying detainees were frequently beaten by guards, couldn't communicate with their families, never had access to attorneys and were told by a prison official that this 'hell on Earth' would be their permanent home.
CNN has reached out to the Salvadoran presidency for comment on the migrants' claims of abuse but has not yet received a response. In the past, the government has said it respects the human rights of those in its custody 'regardless of nationality,' and that its prison system complies with standards of security and order.
Amid so much uncertainty in prison, Reyes said he clung on to scattered rays of hope that kept him going. Chief among them was his faith.
Speaking to CNN from Machiques, Venezuela, days after all 252 migrants were released in a prisoner exchange, Reyes said prayer was what helped him most.
'I prayed to God a lot: 'God hear my prayers, hear my mother's prayers … hear the prayers of my family, of all the families of the people who are here. I know that you hear their prayers. Get me out of here,'' he recalled saying.
He frequently read the Bible, one of the few items that inmates were given in their cells. Before going to bed, he said he also asked God to send him omens in his dreams to know whether he would ever leave the prison.
'And I dreamed I was on a soccer field. Specifically, at the sports center here in town,' he said, which he took as a sign that he would be playing there one day after his eventual release.
He also dreamed of his daughters, Carla and Isabela, whom he hadn't seen since he left Venezuela for the US last year. 'I dreamed that my youngest daughter was already grown up, that she was already going to school, and I said, 'That's a sign. I know that I'm going to come out here because I'm going to see her at school.''
Reyes spoke with an unwavering sense of optimism, a trait he said is part of his personality and something that also lifted the spirits of his fellow detainees.
But that cheerful mindset was often tested, he said, when he and his cellmates were struck by guards, often for disobeying Cecot's strict rules.
They were only allowed to shower once a day around 4 a.m., using the same water they drank from. On a hot day, he said he showered to keep cool at a time he wasn't allowed to. The guards caught him, entered the cell, beat him up and sent him to a smaller insolated cell as punishment, he said.
Several ex-detainees who spoke to CNN in recent days gave similar accounts, alleging that they were frequently beaten by guards and even shot with rubber bullets for staging a hunger strike.
'We went on strike because we demanded to communicate with other families, to know what was happening to us,' Reyes said.
Reyes said he left Venezuela last year due to economic insecurity and applied for asylum in the US in December. But in March, the US Department of Homeland Security accused him of being in the country illegally and belonging to the infamous gang Tren de Aragua, claiming he has tattoos 'that are consistent with those indicating TdA gang membership.'
Reyes denies this. He says the tattoo that apparently incriminated him shows a crown and soccer ball, which he says represents his favorite team Real Madrid.
CNN has verified that Reyes has no criminal record in his home country, and his tattoo artist says he inked him in 2018, when Tren de Aragua was barely known inside Venezuela, let alone abroad.
Reyes was among the first group of Venezuelan migrants sent to Cecot on March 16. In the first two weeks, they were completely cut off from the outside world and did not know if anyone else was aware of their situation, he says.
But at the end of March, a second group of Venezuelan detainees arrived from the US. From them, Reyes learned for the first time that their story was getting global attention and that their relatives were desperately fighting for their release.
He recalled one of the new arrivals saying: 'People are mobilizing with us outside. Your sister, your mother, and your aunt gave a television interview. And people are moving for us.'
Reyes said the news gave everyone hope and, at least for the moment, made them forget about the prison official's initial warning that they would never leave that 'hell.'
Two months into their detention, there was another hopeful dispatch when the detainees were visited by members of the Red Cross. The organization had been in touch with their family members, giving the inmates their first real line of communication with the outside.
Reyes said the detainees relayed short messages through the organization, which took notes of what they said and delivered them to their families.
'I told my sister – I cried – and I told her, 'Take care of my mom, my dad, take care of my daughters. We'll be leaving soon, we'll see each other soon, we'll be together.' It was a short message,' he said.
The visit also gave them another reason to carry on because, according to Reyes, they knew their families hadn't forgotten them.
Their final hopeful sign came about a week ago, when their treatment suddenly changed. No longer were they yelled at or beaten, the migrants said. Instead, they were given new haircuts, better food and fresh clothing.
Around 2 a.m. last Friday, a senior officer entered their ward, telling them they had 20 minutes to shower. They were going home.
'And everyone started screaming, and everyone started crying. I started crying, and I cried because we already had a feeling we were going,' Reyes told CNN.
Caracas and Washington had struck a deal that guaranteed the release of all 252 Venezuelan migrants from El Salvador in exchange for 10 US nationals and dozens of political prisoners held in Venezuela.
The migrants arrived in Venezuela on Friday night and underwent several days of health, immigration, and criminal background checks, among other procedures. By Monday, some were gradually allowed to reunite with their families across the country.
Reyes returned home to Machiques on Tuesday night, greeted by a roaring crowd of about 600 people, including relatives and neighbors. They had decorated his house with hand-drawn banners and a football-themed balloon arrangement of his favorite club Real Madrid.
The crowd chanted his name, cried and threw foam in the air as Reyes hugged his mother Antonia and daughter Carla. He then went to the back of the house to greet his father, telling him: 'It's me, Dad. I'm OK. I'm back and I'm not leaving again.'
Reyes said he returned home as a changed a man.
Asked whether he has a message for US President Donald Trump, whose immigration crackdown led to his imprisonment, Reyes again cited a lesson he learned from the Bible: 'Do not judge by appearances, but with justice.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
18 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Colorado deputies disciplined for helping federal immigration agents
DENVER (AP) — Two Colorado deputies have been disciplined for violating state law by helping federal agents make immigration arrests, and their sheriff says officers from other agencies have done the same. One of the deputies, Alexander Zwinck, was sued by Colorado's attorney general last week, after his cooperation with federal immigration agents on a drug task force was revealed following the June arrest of a college student from Brazil with an expired visa. Following an internal investigation, a second Mesa County Sheriff's Office deputy and task force member, Erik Olson, was also found to have shared information. The two deputies used a Signal chat to relay information to federal agents, according to documents released Wednesday by the sheriff's office. Zwinck was placed on three weeks of unpaid leave, and Olson was given two weeks of unpaid leave, Mesa County Sheriff Todd Rowell said in a statement. Both were removed from the task force. Two supervisors also were disciplined. One was suspended without pay for two days, and another received a letter of reprimand. A third supervisor received counseling. State laws push back against Trump crackdown The lawsuit and disciplinary actions come as lawmakers in Colorado and other Democratic-led states have crafted legislation intended to push back against President Donald Trump's immigration crackdown. Since Trump took office, pro-immigrant bills have advanced through legislatures in Illinois, Vermont, California, Connecticut and other states. The measures include stronger protections for immigrants in housing, employment and police encounters. Trump has enlisted hundreds of state and local law enforcement agencies to help identify immigrants in the U.S. illegally and detain them for potential deportation. The Republican also relaxed longtime rules restricting immigration enforcement near schools, churches and hospitals. Zwinck was sued under a new state law signed by Gov. Jared Polis about two weeks before the arrest of the student from Brazil. It bars local government employees including law enforcement from sharing identifying information about people with federal immigration officials. Previously, only state agencies were barred from doing that. It's one of a series of laws limiting the state's involvement in immigration enforcement passed over the years that has drawn criticism and a lawsuit from the federal government. The U.S. Department of Justice has also sued Illinois and New York, as well as several cities in those states and New Jersey, alleging their policies violate the U.S. Constitution or federal immigration laws. Officers say they were following established procedures Zwinck and Olson told officials they thought they were operating according to long-standing procedures. However, the internal investigation found they had both received and read two emails prior to the passage of the new law about previous limits on cooperation with immigration officials. The most recent was sent on Jan. 30, 2025, after an official for Homeland Security Investigations, part of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, had asked state and local law enforcement officers at a law enforcement meeting to contact HSI or ICE if they arrested a person for a violent crime who was believed not to be a citizen, the investigation documents said. The email said not to contact HSI or ICE. Zwinck said he didn't know about the new law and was not interested in immigration enforcement. 'When I was out there, I wanted to find drugs, guns and bad guys," Zwinck said at a July 23 disciplinary hearing. "And sending that information to HSI they provided the ability to give me real time background information on the person I was in contact with,' he said. Olson, who said he had been with the sheriff's office 18 years, testified at his disciplinary hearing that it was 'standard practice' to send information up to federal agents during traffic stops. "It was routine for ICE to show up on the back end of a traffic stop to do their thing,' Olson said. 'I truly thought what we were doing was condoned by our supervision and lawful.' A lawyer at a law firm listed as representing both deputies, Michael Lowe, did not immediately return a telephone call or email seeking comment. Rowell said drug task force members from other law enforcement agencies, including the Colorado State Patrol, also shared information with immigration agents on the Signal chat. The state patrol denied the claim. The sheriff faulted Attorney General Phil Weiser for filing the lawsuit against Zwinck before a local internal investigation was complete. He called on the Democrat, who is running for governor, to drop it. 'As it stands, the lawsuit filed by the Attorney General's Office sends a demoralizing message to law enforcement officers across Colorado — that the law may be wielded selectively and publicly for maximum political effect rather than applied fairly and consistently,' he said. Weiser said last week that he was investigating whether other officers in the chat violated the law. Spokesperson Lawrence Pacheco said Weiser was presented with evidence of a 'blatant violation of state law' and had to act. "The attorney general has a duty to enforce state laws and protect Coloradans and he'll continue to do so,' Pacheco said. ___ Brown reported from Billings, Montana. Solve the daily Crossword

Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
A US judge says arrested Haitian businessman and former presidential hopeful will remain in custody
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — A federal immigration judge in Miami ordered on Thursday that wealthy Haitian businessman and one-time presidential hopeful Pierre Réginald Boulos remain in custody in the United States, where he is held over accusations of supporting violent gangs in Haiti. Boulos was arrested at his home in South Florida earlier in July, accused of being 'engaged in a campaign of violence and gang support that contributed to Haiti's destabilization,' the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has said. A well-known member of Haiti's elite, he is the most high-profile Haitian arrested to date under the Trump administration's immigration crackdown. Thursday's hearing at the Krome North Service Processing Center was held behind closed doors, with authorities barring journalists and others from the courtroom and the detention center itself. It wasn't immediately known what occurred at the hearing other than the judge denying Boulos be released, a person familiar with the case told The Associated Press. The person spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the hearing. More than a dozen people gathered outside the detention center on Thursday, demanding that Boulos remain in the U.S. — or anywhere else but Haiti. The demonstrators waved at cars that passed by and honked in support. 'If Boulos goes to Haiti, he will not stay in prison. The justice in Haiti are gangs,' read one sign. Some said Boulos should be sent to El Salvador, or even Guantánamo. Another sign read: Send Boulos under the sea. U.S. authorities have not provided any details on Boulos's case, and no documents have been made public. Days after his arrest, ICE also said Boulos failed to disclose in his residency application his involvement in the creation of a political party or that Haiti's government had referred him for prosecution for misusing loans. It added that the State Department 'has determined that certain individuals with U.S. lawful permanent resident status have supported and collaborated with Haitian gang leaders connected to Viv Ansanm, a Haitian foreign terrorist organization.' 'The United States will not allow individuals to enjoy the benefits of legal status in our country while they are facilitating the actions of violent organizations or supporting criminal terrorist organizations abroad,' the statement said. Boulos ran grocery stores, car dealerships and other businesses while in Haiti, where he served as president of the National Chamber of Commerce and Industry. Boulos, who was born in the U.S., has previously denied a flurry of corruption allegations in Haiti. In 2019, he created the Third Way Movement, a political party that he said at the time served as a contrast to the 'shameless elite and the unscrupulous politicians who are working to bog down the country and increase the suffering of the people' of Haiti. Boulos renounced his U.S. citizenship amid expectations of a presidential run, which never materialized. He obtained U.S residency last year, under the Biden administration. Dánica Coto, The Associated Press


Washington Post
an hour ago
- Washington Post
A US judge says arrested Haitian businessman and former presidential hopeful will remain in custody
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — A federal immigration judge in Miami ordered on Thursday that wealthy Haitian businessman and one-time presidential hopeful Pierre Réginald Boulos remain in custody in the United States, where he is held over accusations of supporting violent gangs in Haiti . Boulos was arrested at his home in South Florida earlier in July, accused of being 'engaged in a campaign of violence and gang support that contributed to Haiti's destabilization,' the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has said. A well-known member of Haiti's elite, he is the most high-profile Haitian arrested to date under the Trump administration's immigration crackdown . Thursday's hearing at the Krome North Service Processing Center was held behind closed doors, with authorities barring journalists and others from the courtroom and the detention center itself. It wasn't immediately known what occurred at the hearing other than the judge denying Boulos be released, a person familiar with the case told The Associated Press. The person spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the hearing. More than a dozen people gathered outside the detention center on Thursday, demanding that Boulos remain in the U.S. — or anywhere else but Haiti . The demonstrators waved at cars that passed by and honked in support. 'If Boulos goes to Haiti, he will not stay in prison. The justice in Haiti are gangs,' read one sign. Some said Boulos should be sent to El Salvador , or even Guantánamo . Another sign read: Send Boulos under the sea. U.S. authorities have not provided any details on Boulos's case, and no documents have been made public. Days after his arrest, ICE also said Boulos failed to disclose in his residency application his involvement in the creation of a political party or that Haiti's government had referred him for prosecution for misusing loans. It added that the State Department 'has determined that certain individuals with U.S. lawful permanent resident status have supported and collaborated with Haitian gang leaders connected to Viv Ansanm , a Haitian foreign terrorist organization.' 'The United States will not allow individuals to enjoy the benefits of legal status in our country while they are facilitating the actions of violent organizations or supporting criminal terrorist organizations abroad,' the statement said. Boulos ran grocery stores, car dealerships and other businesses while in Haiti, where he served as president of the National Chamber of Commerce and Industry. Boulos, who was born in the U.S., has previously denied a flurry of corruption allegations in Haiti. In 2019, he created the Third Way Movement, a political party that he said at the time served as a contrast to the 'shameless elite and the unscrupulous politicians who are working to bog down the country and increase the suffering of the people' of Haiti. Boulos renounced his U.S. citizenship amid expectations of a presidential run, which never materialized. He obtained U.S residency last year, under the Biden administration.